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Inoki Genome Federation

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The Inoki Genome Federation (イノキ・ゲノム・フェデレーション, Inoki Genomu Federēshon) (IGF), also known in China as International Glory Fighting,[1][2] was a Japanese professional wrestling and mixed martial arts promotion founded by Antonio Inoki in 2007.

Key Information

History

[edit]
Antonio Inoki, IGF's founder and namesake, in 2012

Antonio Inoki founded the Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) after selling New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), a promotion he founded in 1972. The first IGF show was held on June 29, 2007 at the Sumo Hall in Tokyo, Japan. The show's main event was a match between Kurt Angle and Brock Lesnar, where they competed for Lesnar's IWGP Heavyweight Championship.[3]

From 2007 to 2008, the IGF served as the Japanese territory of the National Wrestling Alliance.[4][5]

On December 31, 2010, Shinichi Suzukawa was scheduled to face Bob Sapp in an IGF special Super Heavyweight bout at K-1 Dynamite!! 2010.[6] The fight was to be held under modified MMA rules, with the fighters being barred from wearing gloves, closed-fist strikes being illegal, and palm strikes being permitted.[7] The fight was planned to air on HDNet in North America.[8] However, the fight was canceled due to a last-minute contract dispute with Sapp; the Japanese audience in attendance were told by the K-1 promoters involved in the dispute that Sapp “had lost his will to fight.”[9]

In 2011, the promotion presented a gift to Kim Jong Il, the-then leader of North Korea as part of a diplomatic effort.[10] In August 2014, IGF held two shows in Pyongyang, North Korea.[11]

On December 29, 2014, IGF announced a deal with PPTV to bring its programming to Chinese audiences.[12] In 2015, Durango Kid and Laberinto, two of Inoki's former students, along with karateka Alfredo Perez, established an IGF off-shoot promotion in the United States called Inoki Sports Management,[13] also known as Lucha Wrestling Puroresu.[14] The three men would also re-establish the Inoki Dojo in Los Angeles.[13]

In 2017, Antonio Inoki began distancing himself from the IGF and created a new promotion called ISM. After the creation of ISM, Antonio's son-in-law Simon Inoki gained more influence within the promotion and created a new brand under the IGF banner called Next Exciting Wrestling (NEW). The IGF's inaugural NEW show was held on April 20, 2017. On March 23, 2018, Antonio Inoki sold his part of the promotion and left the IGF. In April 2018, Nosawa Rongai, along with IGF wrestlers Kendo Kashin and Kazuyuki Fujita, created an IGF off-shoot promotion known as Hagure IGF International.[15][16] A new brand featuring IGF's Chinese wrestlers called Eastern Heroes (东方英雄, Toho Eiyu-den) was later founded by Simon Inoki. On June 26, Eastern Heroes wrestlers participated on night 8 of Pro Wrestling Noah's Navigation with Emerald Spirits tour.[17] The IGF closed on January 9, 2019. After the IGF's closure, Assist Co., Ltd., the promotion's parent company, opened a chain of bakeries, leading to both Kendo Kashin and Simon Inoki to humorously state "IGF has become a bakery".[18][19]

In August 2022, Antonio Inoki revived the IGF, now standing for the Inoki Genki Factory, to serve as his official management company.[20] On October 1, at age 79, Inoki died from systemic transthyretin amyloidosis.[21][22][23] On December 28, the Inoki Genki Factory held their first show, Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye x Ganryujima, a memorial event honoring Inoki organized in collaboration with Samurai Warriors Ganryujima and NJPW.[24] On December 14, 2024, IGF participated in the Antonio Inoki Memorial Show organized in Shanghai, China by NJPW and various Asia-Pacific Federation of Wrestling promotions.[25]

Roster

[edit]

Championships

[edit]

IWGP Heavyweight Championship

[edit]

IGF Championship

[edit]
IGF Championship
Details
PromotionInoki Genome Federation
Date establishedAugust 22, 2011
Date retiredJanuary 9, 2019
Statistics
First championJérôme Le Banner
Final championOli Thompson
Most reignsAll title holders (1)
Longest reignOli Thompson (1105 days)
Shortest reignMirko Cro Cop (153 days)
Oldest championKazuyuki Fujita (41 years, 272 days)
Youngest championSatoshi Ishii (27 years, 12 days)

In February 2011, IGF started a tournament to determine the first ever IGF Champion, which eventually led to a final match between Jérôme Le Banner and Josh Barnett. However, just days prior to the final match taking place, IGF announced on August 19 that Barnett would not be able to attend the event.[26] On August 22, IGF declared Le Banner the first champion.[27] The title was founded as a professional wrestling championship, but has since December 31, 2013, been contested in legitimate mixed martial arts fights.[28][29]

Title history

[edit]
Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
Defenses Number of successful defenses
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days Defenses
1 Jérôme Le Banner August 22, 2011 1 327 6 Declared first champion, after Josh Barnett pulls out of a tournament final match. [27]
2 Kazuyuki Fujita July 14, 2012 Genome21 Osaka, Japan 1 535 4 [30]
3 Satoshi Ishii December 31, 2013 Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2013 Tokyo, Japan 1 235 0 With this match the title began to be contested in legitimate mixed martial arts fights. Won by unanimous decision.
4 Mirko Cro Cop August 23, 2014 Inoki Genome Fight 2 Tokyo, Japan 1 153 1 Second round doctor stoppage.
  1. def. Satoshi Ishii at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2014 on December 31, 2014
Vacated January 23, 2015 Cro Cop was stripped of the title when he signed with the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
5 Oli Thompson December 31, 2015 Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2015 Tokyo, Japan 1 1,105 0 Defeated Fernando Rodrigues Jr. by TKO to win the IGF World GP and the vacant title. [31]
Deactivated January 9, 2019 Retired when promotion closed.

Tournaments

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IGF Championship Tournament

[edit]
First round
(Genome14, Genome15, and Genome16)
Semifinals
(Genome15 and Genome16)
Final
N/A
         
Josh Barnett Win
Montanha Silva
Josh Barnett Win
Bobby Lashley
Bobby Lashley Win
Keith Hanson
Jerome Le Banner Forfeit
Josh Barnett
Shinichi Suzukawa Win
Bob Sapp
Jerome Le Banner Win
Erik Hammer*
Jerome Le Banner Win
Shinichi Suzukawa
  • Erik Hammer replaced Shinichi Suzukawa in the tournament after defeating Ray Sefo.[32]

World Bantamweight Grand Prix

[edit]
 
Quarterfinals
(DREAM 17)
Semifinals
(Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoka 2011)
Final
(Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoka 2011)
 
          
 
 
 
 
Japan Masakazu ImanariW
 
 
 
United States Abel Cullum SUB
 
Japan Masakazu Imanari DEC
 
 
 
United States Antonio BanuelosW
 
Japan Hideo Tokoro DEC
 
 
 
United States Antonio BanuelosW
 
United States Antonio BanuelosTKO
 
 
 
Brazil Bibiano Fernandes W
 
Brazil Bibiano Fernandes W
 
 
 
Japan Takafumi Otsuka SUB
 
Brazil Bibiano Fernandes W
 
 
 
Brazil Rodolfo MarquesDEC
 
Russia Yusup Saadulaev DEC
 
 
Brazil Rodolfo Marques W
 

Inoki Genome Tournament 2012

[edit]
  • This tournament took place entirely on the Genome20 event.
Semifinals Final
      
Shinichi Suzukawa Win
Yusuke Kawaguchi
Atsushi Sawada Win
Shinichi Suzukawa
Atsushi Sawada Win
Hideki Suzuki

Inoki Genome Tournament 2013

[edit]
  • This tournament took place entirely on the Genome26 event.
QuarterfinalsSemifinalFinal
Hideki SuzukiWin
Hideki Suzuki*Win
Akira Jo
Atsushi SawadaDouble CountoutAtsushi Sawada*
Shinichi Suzukawa*
Atsushi SawadaWin
Shogun Okamoto
  • Shinichi Suzukawa received a bye to the semi-finals. Hideki Suzuki received a bye to the final after defeating Crusher Kawaguchi in a match. Atsushi Sawada advanced to the final despite his match against Shinichi Suzukawa ending in a double countout.[33]

Road to Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye Challenge Tournament

[edit]
Semifinals Final
      
Yusuke Masuda W
Takaaki "C-Boy" Oban DEC
Yusuke Masuda W
Ryo Sakai DEC
Ryo Sakai W
Tsuyoshi Kurihara DEC

IGF World GP

[edit]
  • Quarterfinals took place on April 11, 2015 at Inoki Genome Fight 3.
  • Semi-finals took place on August 29, 2015 at Inoki Genome Fight 4.
  • The final took place on December 31, 2015 at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2015.
Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
Sweden Yosef Ali Mohammad TKO
Netherlands Dion Staring Rd 1
Sweden Yosef Ali Mohammad TKO
Brazil Fernando Rodrigues Jr. Rd 1
Brazil Fernando Rodrigues Jr. TKO
France Antony Rea Rd 1
Brazil Fernando Rodrigues Jr. TKO
England Oli Thompson Rd 1
United States Chris Barnett TKO
Bulgaria Emil Zahariev Rd 2
United States Chris Barnett DEC
England Oli Thompson Rd 2
England Oli Thompson DEC
Japan Ikuhisa Minowa Rd 2

[34]

Genome-1: Osaka

[edit]
  • This tournament took place entirely on the Genome33 event.
Semifinals Final
      
Naoya Ogawa Win
Minowaman
Atsushi Sawada Win
Minowaman
Atsushi Sawada Win
Montanha Silva

Genome-1: Nagoya

[edit]
  • This tournament took place entirely on the Genome34 event.
Semifinals Final
      
Hideki Suzuki Win
Wang Bin
Hideki Suzuki Win
Daichi Hashimoto
Daichi Hashimoto Win
Raj Singh

Lucha Libre World Cup 2017

[edit]
Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
         
MexicoTeam Mexico AAA
(Pagano and Psycho Clown)
Pin
United StatesTeam USA Noah
(Cody Hall and Quiet Storm)
MexicoTeam Mexico AAA
(Pagano and Psycho Clown)
Pin
JapanTeam Japan IGF
(Kendo Kashin and Nosawa)
JapanTeam Japan IGF
(Kendo Kashin and Nosawa)
DQ
Team Rest of the World
(Mil Muertes and Vampiro)
MexicoTeam Mexico AAA
(Pagano and Psycho Clown)
Pin
JapanTeam Noah Japan
(Hi69 and Taiji Ishimori)
JapanTeam Noah Japan
(Hi69 and Taiji Ishimori)
Pin
United StatesTeam USA Lucha Underground
(Marty Martinez and Son of Havoc)
JapanTeam Noah Japan
(Hi69 and Taiji Ishimori)
Pin
United StatesTeam USA Impact
(Andrew Everett and DJZ)
United StatesTeam USA Impact
(Andrew Everett and DJZ)
Pin
MexicoTeam Mexico Lucha Underground
(Aero Star and Drago)

IGF events

[edit]
Event title Date Venue Location Main event
Toukon Bom-Ba-Ye June 29, 2007 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Brock Lesnar (c) vs. Kurt Angle for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship
Genome 1 September 8, 2007 NGK Insulators Hall Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Josh Barnett vs. Don Frye
Genome 2 〜 Inoki Fighting Xmas December 20, 2007 Ariake Coliseum Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Tadao Yasuda
Genome3 〜 Inoki Memorial 65 February 16, 2008 Ariake Coliseum Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Josh Barnett
Genome4 April 12, 2008 Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium Osaka, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Tomko
Genome5 〜 Hokkaido Genki Summit June 23, 2008 Tsukisamu Dome Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan Montanha Silva vs. Naoya Ogawa
Inoki Genki Festival in Hakodate 〜 Hakodate Tomodachi Bom-Ba-Ye June 25, 2008 Hakodate Arena Hakodate, Hokkaido, Japan Naoya Ogawa and Atsushi Sawada vs. Necro Butcher and The Predator
Genome6 August 15, 2008 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Josh Barnett vs. Tank Abbott
Genome7 November 24, 2008 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Josh Barnett vs. Jon Andersen
Genome8 March 15, 2009 Hiroshima Sun Plaza Hiroshima, Japan Naoya Ogawa and The Predator vs. Yoshihiro Takayama and Montanha Silva
Genome9 August 9, 2009 Ariake Coliseum Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa and Josh Barnett vs. Yoshihiro Takayama and Bob Sapp
Genome10 November 3, 2009 JCB Hall Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Yoshihiro Takayama
Genome11 February 22, 2010 JCB Hall Tokyo, Japan Kensuke Sasaki and Katsuhiko Nakajima vs. Naoya Ogawa and Atsushi Sawada
Genome12 May 9, 2010 Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium Osaka, Japan Minoru Suzuki and Naomichi Marufuji vs. Naoya Ogawa and Atsushi Sawada
Genome13 September 25, 2010 JCB Hall Tokyo, Japan Josh Barnett vs. Tim Sylvia
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2010 December 3, 2010 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Montanha Silva
Genome14 February 5, 2011 Fukuoka Kokusai Center Fukuoka, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Bob Sapp
Genome15 April 28, 2011 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner vs. Shinichi Suzukawa
Genome16 July 10, 2011 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner vs. Erik Hammer
Inoki Genome 〜 Super Stars Festival 2011 August 27, 2011 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Kazuyuki Fujita for the IGF Championship
Genome17 September 3, 2011 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Montanha Silva for the IGF Championship
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2011 December 2, 2011 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Josh Barnett for the IGF Championship
Fighting Spirit Festival in Iwaki December 4, 2011 Iwaki Meisei University Iwaki, Fukushima, Japan Atsushi Sawada and Hideki Suzuki vs. Shinichi Suzukawa and Montanha Silva
Fight For Japan: Genki Desu Ka Omisoka 2011 December 31, 2011 Saitama Super Arena Saitama, Japan Fedor Emelianenko vs. Satoshi Ishii
Genome18 February 17, 2012 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Peter Aerts for the IGF Championship
Genome19 March 20, 2012 Fukuoka Kokusai Center Fukuoka, Japan Peter Aerts and Minowaman vs. Shinichi Suzukawa and Atsushi Sawada
Genome20 May 26, 2012 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Alexander Kozlov for the IGF Championship
KF-1 World Martial Arts Tournament July 10, 2012 Shanghai Oriental Sports Center Shanghai, China Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Alexander Kozlov for the IGF Championship
Genome21 July 14, 2012 Bodymaker Colosseum Osaka, Japan Jérôme Le Banner (c) vs. Kazuyuki Fujita for the IGF Championship
Genome22 September 29, 2012 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita (c) vs. Bobby Lashley for the IGF Championship
Genome23 October 16, 2012 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Atsushi Sawada
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye World Series in Pakistan December 2, 2012 Lahore National Hockey Stadium Lahore, Pakistan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Hideki Suzuki
December 5, 2012 Arbab Niaz Stadium Peshawar, Pakistan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Shogun Okamoto
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2012 December 31, 2012 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Naoya Ogawa
Genome24 February 23, 2013 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Atsushi Sawada
Genome25 March 20, 2013 Fukuoka Kokusai Center Fukuoka, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita (c) vs. Erik Hammer for the IGF Championship
Genome26 May 26, 2013 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita and Bobby Lashley vs. Naoya Ogawa and Shinichi Suzukawa
Genome27 July 20, 2013 Bodymaker Colosseum Osaka, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita, Bobby Lashley, Shinichi Suzukawa, Bob Sapp, and Atsushi Sawada vs. Shogun Okamoto, Hiromi Amada, Peter Aerts, Naoya Ogawa, and Hideki Suzuki
Shangai Dojo Opening Anniversary Special Event July 24, 2013 Shanghai Dojo Shanghai, China Peter Aerts vs. Hideki Suzuki
Fields New Model Exhibition September 11, 2013 Prince Park Tower Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Shogun Okamoto
Genome28 September 28, 2013 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita (c) vs. Atsushi Sawada for the IGF Championship
Genome29 October 26, 2013 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita (c) vs. Hideki Suzuki for the IGF Championship
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2013 December 31, 2013 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita (c) vs. Satoshi Ishii for the IGF Championship
Pakistan–Japan Friendship Festival April 27, 2014 Ueno Park Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Shogun Okamoto
Inoki Genome Fight 1 May 5, 2014 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Satoshi Ishii (c) vs. Philip De Fries for the IGF Championship
Genome30 July 13, 2014 Fukuoka Kokusai Center Fukuoka, Japan Naoya Ogawa and Minowaman vs. Hiromi Amada and Jérôme Le Banner
Tohoku Earthquake Restoration Charity Event – Genki Festival 2014 July 20, 2014 Iwaki, Fukushima, Japan
July 21, 2014 Sōma, Fukushima, Japan
July 22, 2014 Iwanuma, Miyagi, Japan
July 23, 2014 Ishinomaki, Miyagi, Japan
July 24, 2014 Kesennuma, Miyagi, Japan
July 25, 2014 Ōfunato, Iwate, Japan
July 26, 2014 Miyako, Iwate, Japan
July 27, 2014 Aomori, Japan
Inoki Genome Fight 2 August 23, 2014 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Satoshi Ishii (c) vs. Mirko Cro Cop for the IGF Championship
International Pro-Wrestling Festival in Pyongyang August 30, 2014 Pyongyang Arena Pyongyang, North Korea Kazuyuki Fujita vs. Erik Hammer
August 31, 2014
Genome31 October 13, 2014 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Jérôme Le Banner and Naoya Ogawa vs. Erik Hammer and Kazuyuki Fujita
Road to Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2014 Fan Festival December 1, 2014 Korakuen Hall Tokyo, Japan Daichi Hashimoto vs. Shinya Aoki
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2014 December 31, 2014 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Mirko Cro Cop (c) vs. Satoshi Ishii for the IGF Championship
Genome32 February 20, 2015 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa and Wang Bin vs. Minowaman and Atsushi Sawada
Inoki Genome Fight 3 April 11, 2015 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Oli Thompson vs. Minowaman
Genome33 May 5, 2015 Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium Osaka, Japan Atsushi Sawada vs. Minowaman
Genome34 June 27, 2015 Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium Nagoya, Aichi, Japan Hideki Suzuki vs. Daichi Hashimoto
Inoki Genome Fight 4 August 29, 2015 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Oli Thompson vs. Chris Barnett
Ja Matsuri 2015 October 31, 2015 Minamisōma, Fukushima, Japan
November 1, 2015
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2015 December 31, 2015 Ryogoku Kokugikan Tokyo, Japan Oli Thompson vs. Fernando Rodrigues Jr. for the vacant IGF Championship
Genome35 February 26, 2016 Tokyo Dome City Hall Tokyo, Japan Naoya Ogawa vs. Shinya Aoki
Genome36 May 29, 2016 EDION Arena Osaka Osaka, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa and Shinya Aoki vs. Ryoji Sai and Rikiya Fudo
Shanghai Dojo Opening Commemoration Convention August 8, 2016 Shanghai Dojo Shanghai, China Kenso and Minoru Tanaka vs. Alexander Otsuka and Keisuke Okuda
Inoki–Ali 40th Anniversary September 3, 2016 Tokyo, Japan Masakatsu Funaki and Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Shinya Aoki and Alexander Otsuka
NEW Opening Series April 5, 2017 Korakuen Hall Tokyo, Japan Josh Barnett vs. Shinichi Suzukawa
Shanghai Launching Business Convention April 8, 2017 Shanghai, China Kenso and Lin Dong Xuan vs. Alexander Otsuka and Chang Jian Feng
NEW Opening Series April 20, 2017 Shinjuku FACE Tokyo, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa and Masakatsu Funaki vs. Alexander Otsuka and Ryuji Hijikata
April 30, 2017 Fuerai Cube Kasukabe Kasukabe, Saitama, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa and Masakatsu Funaki vs. Alexander Otsuka and Ryuji Hijikata
May 12, 2017 Tochigi Prefectural Cultural Center Utsunomiya, Tochigi, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Super Tiger
May 21, 2017 Chiba, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Super Tiger
NEW Opening Series: Nasu Festival 2017 May 27, 2017 Nasu Highland Park Nasu, Tochigi, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa vs. Super Tiger
NEW 2nd Series June 2, 2017 Tokyo, Japan Kazunari Murakami and Kohei Sato vs. Shinichi Suzukawa and Keisuke Okuda
June 8, 2017 Matsumoto, Nagano, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa and Keisuke Okuda vs. Kohei Sato and Black Tiger
June 17, 2017 Osaka, Japan Shiro Fukumen #1 and Shiro Fukumen #2 vs. Shinichi Suzukawa and Keisuke Okuda
June 18, 2017 Himeji, Hyōgo, Japan Shinichi Suzukawa and Keisuke Okuda vs. Shiro Fukumen #1 and Shiro Fukumen #3
July 7, 2017 Tokyo, Japan Kazunari Murakami and Kohei Sato vs. Keisuke Okuda and Akira Jo
July 15, 2017 Okazaki, Aichi, Japan Kazunari Murakami and Shiro Fukumen #4 vs. Keisuke Okuda and Akira Jo
July 16, 2017 Tsu, Mie, Japan Kazunari Murakami and Shiro Fukumen #4 vs. Keisuke Okuda and Akira Jo
August 25, 2017 Tokyo, Japan
Lucha Libre World Cup 2017 October 9, 2017 Shin-Kiba 1st Ring Tokyo, Japan Mil Muertes vs. Vampiro
October 10, 2017 Korakuen Hall Pagano and Psycho Clown vs. Hi69 and Taiji Ishimori
Japan & China Diplomatic Relations 45th Anniversary November 16, 2017 Korakuen Hall Tokyo, Japan Kazuyuki Fujita and Kendo Kashin vs. Masakatsu Funaki and Wang Fei
New Pro-Wrestling Toho Eiyu-den December 17, 2017 Shenzhen, China
December 18, 2017
December 21, 2017 Zhuhai, China
Toho Eiyu-den Tokyo Conference March 20, 2018 Korakuen Hall Tokyo, Japan Chang Jian Feng and Xuan Lin Dong vs. Akira Jo and Keisuke Okuda
New Pro-Wrestling Toho Eiyu-den Beijing Conference April 21, 2018 Beijing, China
Dotonbori Pro x Toho Eiyu-den May 27, 2018 EDION Arena Osaka Osaka, Japan Toru (c) vs. Rapid for the WDW Championship
New Pro-Wrestling Toho Eiyu-den Shanghai Conference August 8, 2018 Shanghai, China
August 9, 2018
Dotonbori Pro x Toho Eiyu-den 2 〜 Naniwa Eiyuden October 28, 2018 EDION Arena Osaka Osaka, Japan Billy Ken Kid, Jiang Ma Zhu, and Hasegawa vs. Kuuga, Chang Jian Feng, and Lin Dong Xuan
Toho Eiyu-den Tianjin Conference December 2, 2018 Tianjin, China

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) was a Japanese professional wrestling and mixed martial arts promotion founded by Antonio Inoki in March 2007 after his exit from New Japan Pro-Wrestling.[1][2] Envisioned as a spiritual successor to Inoki's earlier Universal Wrestling Federation, IGF emphasized shoot-style wrestling—mimicking legitimate fights with stiff strikes and submissions—alongside outright MMA bouts to propagate Inoki's philosophy of unyielding fighting spirit.[2] The promotion hosted hybrid-rule events featuring international competitors, such as annual Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye spectacles with fighters like Mirko Cro Cop and Satoshi Ishii, and introduced distinctive championships including the IWGP 3rd Belt and the Super Luxurious 200 Million Yen Title.[3][2] After conducting 21 events with collaborations like talent exchanges with TNA Wrestling, IGF ceased operations in January 2019, marking the end of Inoki's direct involvement in this hybrid combat endeavor prior to his passing in 2022.[3][1]

Founding and Historical Development

Origins and Establishment (2007)

The Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) was founded by Antonio Inoki on March 8, 2007, after he sold his shares in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) to video game company Yuke's in 2005 and subsequently departed the organization he had established in 1972.[1] Inoki, a pioneering figure in Japanese professional wrestling known for introducing mixed martial arts elements into the sport, created IGF to independently advance his long-standing vision of integrating diverse combat disciplines under a unified promotional banner.[4] The promotion operated as a shoot-style entity, blending scripted professional wrestling with legitimate fighting techniques, reflecting Inoki's emphasis on realism and cross-training between grapplers and strikers. IGF's inaugural event, Toukon Bom-Ba Ye, occurred on June 29, 2007, at Tokyo's Ryogoku Kokugikan sumo hall, marking the official launch of operations.[5] The card featured international talent exchanges, including matches involving wrestlers from Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), though last-minute changes disrupted the planned lineup and drew a crowd of 8,426 spectators.[2] This debut underscored IGF's ambition to position itself as a bridge between Japanese strong-style wrestling and global mixed martial arts, with Inoki serving as the central figurehead and booker. Early activities also included recognizing select NJPW titles, such as the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, to maintain continuity with Inoki's wrestling legacy.[1]

Expansion and Key Milestones (2008–2016)

Following the inaugural events of 2007, the Inoki Genome Federation expanded its domestic operations with a series of Genome-branded shows in 2008, including Genome 2 on February 16 at Tokyo's Ariake Colosseum and Genome 5 ~ Hokkaido Genki Summit on June 23 at Tsukisamu Alphacourt Dome in Sapporo.[6] These events featured a mix of professional wrestling and shoot-style bouts, drawing on Inoki's vision of integrating martial arts elements, with attendance figures reflecting growing interest in hybrid formats amid Japan's competitive combat sports landscape. The promotion also hosted regional shows, such as the Hakodate Tomodachi Bom-Ba-Ye on June 25, extending reach beyond Tokyo to northern Japan.[7] By late 2008, IGF concluded its role as the Japanese territory for the National Wrestling Alliance, shifting focus to independent operations and deeper incorporation of mixed martial arts talent. This period saw roster development through collaborations, including early talent exchanges with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, which brought international wrestlers like Kurt Angle into prior cross-promotional contexts, though IGF emphasized self-sustained events thereafter. Annual Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye spectacles became fixtures, with the 2012 edition on December 31 at Ryogoku Kokugikan in Tokyo highlighting MMA returns, such as Mirko Filipović's submission victory over Shinichi Suzukawa via armbar.[8] A significant milestone occurred in 2011 with the establishment of the IGF Championship, created through a tournament culminating on August 22, when Jérôme Le Banner was declared inaugural champion after defeating Bob Sapp. This title, defended in both worked and legitimate fights, symbolized IGF's commitment to a "genome" of combat disciplines, with subsequent holders including Kazuyuki Fujita and Oli Thompson. The promotion further innovated with tournaments like the Inoki Genome Tournament in 2012 and 2013, fostering competition among wrestlers and fighters.[9] Expansion extended internationally in December 2012 with the Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye World Series in Pakistan, featuring events on December 2 at Lahore National Hockey Stadium and December 5 at Peshawar's Arbab Niaz Stadium, the latter drawing 25,000 spectators for matches including Kazuyuki Fujita versus Shogun Okamoto. These shows marked IGF's push beyond Japan, leveraging Inoki's prior diplomatic ties in the region to promote combat sports amid limited local infrastructure. Through 2016, IGF maintained a schedule of approximately 5-10 events annually, balancing pro wrestling exhibitions with MMA bouts involving global talent like Bob Sapp and Ikuhisa Minowa, though financial constraints and competition from promotions like New Japan Pro-Wrestling limited broader growth.[3]

Decline and Closure (2017–2019)

Following the relative stability of prior years, IGF's event schedule diminished significantly in 2017, with the promotion's last documented shows occurring that year, including the Inoki Ism event on July 24.[10] The NEW sub-series, launched on April 20, 2017, as an attempt to revitalize activity with a focus on emerging talent, abruptly ended on July 26 after just three months amid escalating internal disputes between founder Antonio Inoki and his stepson Simon Inoki, who managed aspects of the promotion.[11] This fallout contributed to operational instability, as no further major events were held in 2018. On March 23, 2018, Antonio Inoki sold his ownership stake in IGF and departed the organization, effectively severing his direct involvement after over a decade.[12] In the ensuing months, remnants of IGF's roster splintered; in April 2018, wrestler Nosawa Rongai, alongside Kendo Kashin and others, established a new independent group incorporating IGF's Chinese fighters, signaling the promotion's fragmentation.[13] IGF formally ceased operations on January 9, 2019, after 12 years.[1] Its parent entity, Assist Co., Ltd., subsequently pivoted to unrelated ventures, including a chain of bakeries, reflecting underlying financial unsustainability in the wrestling and MMA hybrid model.

Philosophy and Operational Style

Inoki's Vision of "Genome" Integration

Inoki envisioned the "genome" as a metaphor for the core genetic essence or foundational principles of combat sports, drawing from the complete set of hereditary information encoded in DNA to represent the inherited philosophies and techniques passed down through wrestling lineages. This concept stemmed from his belief in preserving and evolving the "Rikidozan genome"—the pioneering strong style introduced by Japanese wrestling founder Rikidozan, which blended Western pro wrestling with indigenous martial arts elements—and fusing it with his own "Inoki genome," characterized by rigorous training in judo, karate, and boxing to create a hybrid discipline emphasizing realistic strikes, submissions, and endurance.[14] By establishing the Inoki Genome Federation in 2007, Inoki aimed to institutionalize this integration, allowing the federation to serve as a repository for these "genetic" codes, ensuring their propagation beyond individual careers.[15] Central to this vision was the deliberate blending of professional wrestling's theatrical structure with mixed martial arts' legitimacy, rejecting rigid separations between scripted bouts and unscripted fights in favor of events that showcased transitional rulesets, such as IGF's hybrid matches permitting wrestling holds alongside ground strikes. Inoki, who had pioneered such crossovers since his 1976 bout against Muhammad Ali and his co-creation of shoot-style promotions, sought to cultivate fighters embodying multifaceted "genomes" capable of adapting across disciplines, thereby advancing what he termed the "strongest style" of combat entertainment. This approach was not merely promotional but philosophical, rooted in Inoki's personal doctrine—often called "Inokism"—which prioritized martial authenticity and global outreach over entertainment purity, as evidenced by IGF's inclusion of international talent and experimental spectacles combining sumo, kickboxing, and pro wrestling elements.[16][17] The integration extended to talent development, where Inoki advocated for dojos training practitioners in multiple "genomes" simultaneously, fostering versatility to counter the specialization trends in siloed promotions like pure MMA organizations or traditional wrestling circuits. Critics noted potential inconsistencies in execution, as IGF events varied between full MMA rules and wrestling-dominant formats, but Inoki maintained this fluidity as essential to genomic evolution, mirroring natural selection in combat sports where superior hybrids prevail. This vision influenced subsequent Japanese promotions but faced challenges in sustaining unified rules, ultimately reflecting Inoki's lifelong pursuit of transcending genre boundaries through inherited and innovated fighting essences.[18]

Hybrid Approach to Pro Wrestling and MMA

The Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) distinguished itself by integrating professional wrestling with mixed martial arts (MMA) on unified event cards, featuring a range of match types from scripted bouts emphasizing athletic spectacle to unscripted combats prioritizing competitive outcomes. This operational model allowed wrestlers trained in legitimate fighting techniques to compete alongside MMA specialists, fostering matches that tested adaptability across disciplines.[4][19] IGF events often employed customized rulesets to bridge the formats, such as "IGF Rules" for shoot-style wrestling encounters that permitted stiff strikes, submissions, and limited grappling without traditional pinfalls, alongside pure MMA fights structured in rounds with options for knockouts or taps. Notable examples included bouts like Josh Barnett versus Hideki Suzuki on December 31, 2011, conducted under these hybrid constraints to simulate real combat while maintaining wrestling's dramatic flow. This approach extended to the IGF Championship, which evolved from a pro wrestling title to defenses in verifiable MMA settings by late 2013, underscoring the promotion's commitment to escalating authenticity.[20] The hybrid framework drew MMA talent from international circuits—such as Brazilian jiu-jitsu practitioners and sambo experts—into wrestling-style scenarios, and vice versa, with wrestlers like those from Inoki's strong style lineage adapting to no-holds-barred elements. Critics noted challenges in audience reception, as the blend sometimes blurred expectations between entertainment and legitimacy, yet it aligned with Inoki's experimental ethos of cultivating versatile "genomes" of fighters capable of thriving in either domain.[21]

Talent Management

Core Roster and Recruitment

The core roster of the Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) primarily comprised Japanese professional wrestlers and shoot-style specialists, supplemented by select mixed martial arts (MMA) veterans for hybrid matches. Standout members included Shinichi Suzukawa, a mainstay who participated in multiple IGF events blending pro wrestling and legitimate strikes; Atsushi Sawada, valued for his grappling expertise; and Akira Jo, a technical wrestler active in the promotion's midcard bouts.[22][11] Other consistent performers encompassed Taka Kunou and Masked Genome Jr., who embodied the promotion's emphasis on resilient, hybrid combatants.[22] Recruitment strategies focused on scouting fighters from MMA, kickboxing, and pro wrestling backgrounds to align with founder Antonio Inoki's "genome" concept of integrating diverse combat genes for superior evolution in the ring. The promotion drew international talent like Bob Sapp, a power striker featured in high-profile IGF appearances, and Naoya Ogawa, an Olympic judoka who defended the IGF Championship.[11][23] Young Japanese prospects were often trained in shoot-style dojos affiliated with Inoki's network, prioritizing athleticism and adaptability over pure entertainment value, as seen in the development of talents like Daichi Hashimoto before his departure.[22] This approach occasionally involved one-off signings of global stars such as Kurt Angle and Brock Lesnar for inaugural events, but sustained the core through domestic recruitment to maintain operational consistency.[11] By the promotion's later years, the roster at closure included veterans like Hideki Suzuki and Masakatsu Funaki, reflecting a blend of experience and Inoki's cross-disciplinary vision.

Notable Fighters and Alumni

Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović, a renowned Croatian heavyweight with a background in kickboxing and MMA organizations like Pride FC and UFC, competed twice in IGF against Satoshi Ishii. Their initial bout at IGF 2 on August 23, 2014, ended in a unanimous decision victory for Ishii after three five-minute rounds.[24] Filipović won the rematch for the IGF Championship at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2014 on December 31, 2014, via second-round TKO (head kick and punches) at 2:37.[25][26] Satoshi Ishii, the 2008 Olympic judo gold medalist in the -100 kg division, served as a prominent IGF competitor and champion, leveraging his grappling expertise in openweight and heavyweight bouts. He captured the IGF Championship by defeating Phil De Fries via TKO (punches) in the first round at IGF 1 on April 5, 2014.[27] Ishii's IGF tenure included defenses and title challenges, blending his judo roots with striking exchanges typical of the promotion's hybrid format.[10] Bobby Lashley, an American wrestler and former WWE Intercontinental Champion with MMA experience in Bellator, joined IGF under a two-year contract signed on June 26, 2013. He debuted on September 25, 2013, and recorded 9 wins against 2 losses in pro wrestling matches, often showcasing his power-based style against Japanese opponents.[28] Brock Lesnar, the IGF-recognized IWGP Heavyweight Champion following his 2005 NJPW reign, defended the title against Kurt Angle at the promotion's inaugural show on June 29, 2007, securing victory via submission (Kimura lock) in a worked match emphasizing strong-style elements. This event highlighted IGF's early ties to international wrestling talent amid Inoki's vision for cross-promotional legitimacy.

Championships

IGF Championship and Title Defenses

The IGF Championship represented the pinnacle of the promotion's hybrid combat philosophy, initially defended under pro wrestling rules before transitioning to MMA formats starting with the December 31, 2013, title match. Established via a 2011 tournament featuring international fighters such as Josh Barnett and Jérôme Le Banner, the belt underscored Inoki's emphasis on "genome" integration across martial disciplines. Le Banner emerged as the inaugural champion, securing the title through victories in tournament bouts, and made multiple defenses, including against Alexander Kozlov on October 7, 2012, under shoot wrestling rules.[29] The early reigns focused on worked matches blending striking and grappling, aligning with IGF's foundational events like Genome series shows. Kazuyuki Fujita claimed the championship from Le Banner in early 2012, holding it for approximately 535 days with defenses that maintained the pro wrestling emphasis amid IGF's evolving roster. The title shifted decisively toward legitimacy on December 31, 2013, when Satoshi Ishii defeated Fujita via unanimous decision in an MMA bout at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye, marking the first defense under full mixed martial arts regulations.[30] Ishii's 235-day reign included high-profile challenges reflective of Inoki's global recruitment, but he lost the belt to Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović on August 23, 2014, via TKO. Cro Cop, a veteran kickboxer and MMA fighter, defended successfully against Ishii in a rematch TKO via head kick and punches on December 31, 2014, at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye, extending his reign to 153 days before vacating it upon signing with the UFC in January 2015.[31] The championship was reactivated as vacant later in 2015, with Oli Thompson capturing it via first-round TKO over Fernando Rodrigues Jr. at the IGF World Grand Prix on December 31, 2015, in Tokyo.[32] Thompson's subsequent 1,105-day reign, the longest in title history, featured no recorded defenses, coinciding with IGF's declining event schedule and financial strains. The belt remained inactive following the promotion's closure announcement on January 9, 2019, with no further contests.[1] Overall, the IGF Championship saw five recognized reigns, emphasizing heavyweight clashes that tested Inoki's crossover vision, though critics noted inconsistent booking and limited mainstream exposure limited its defenses' frequency and impact.

Recognition of External Titles

The Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) recognized a disputed lineage of the IWGP Heavyweight Championship originating from New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), which it treated as an external title continued under its own auspices. Following Brock Lesnar's victory for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship on October 8, 2005, NJPW vacated the title on July 15, 2006, after Lesnar failed to appear for defenses amid contractual and visa disputes. Antonio Inoki, departing NJPW to establish IGF in 2007, rejected the vacating as erroneous and upheld Lesnar as the legitimate champion, incorporating the belt—physically retained by Lesnar—into IGF events as the promotion's version of the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, sometimes designated the Third Belt.[33][34] This recognition facilitated title defenses within IGF, diverging from NJPW's separate lineage. On September 30, 2007, Kurt Angle defeated Lesnar via submission in Yokohama, Japan, to claim the championship in IGF's inaugural major event, marking the belt's first defense under the promotion. Subsequent defenses included Bob Sapp challenging Angle unsuccessfully on December 31, 2007, at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2007, before the title's activity waned and was eventually deactivated without formal unification or abandonment announcement. IGF's interpretation positioned the belt as a legitimate extension of puroresu heritage, though NJPW maintained its own uninterrupted IWGP history excluding the IGF era.[33][35] Complementing this, IGF's status as the National Wrestling Alliance's (NWA) Japanese territory from June 2007 to 2008 extended NWA sanctioning to its championships, effectively recognizing IGF's top titles—including the adopted IWGP variant—as NWA-endorsed equivalents, such as the NWA Japan Championship. This affiliation, inherited from Inoki's prior NJPW ties, briefly aligned IGF with the NWA's territorial framework but dissolved amid organizational shifts, with no further external title integrations documented post-2008.[36]

Tournaments and Signature Events

Major Tournament Formats

The Inoki Genome Federation primarily utilized single-elimination bracket formats for its major tournaments, typically structured to determine or unify the IGF Championship in openweight divisions without strict weight classes. These tournaments spanned multiple events, with preliminary rounds held at standard cards and finals culminating at flagship shows like Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye. Matches operated under IGF hybrid rules, integrating professional wrestling elements such as pins and rope breaks with MMA techniques including strikes and submissions, often without time limits to emphasize decisive outcomes.[37][38] The inaugural IGF Championship tournament launched in early 2011 across several events, featuring first-round bouts such as Bobby Lashley defeating Keith Hanson via submission in 4:59 and Shinichi Suzukawa losing to Jérôme Le Banner via TKO in 5:39. The bracket progressed to a scheduled final between Le Banner and Josh Barnett on June 29, 2011, at Sumo Hall, but Barnett's withdrawal resulted in Le Banner being declared champion without contest. This format prioritized international talent draws, blending scripted and legitimate fighting styles to align with Inoki's vision of "genome" evolution in combat sports.[37] In 2015, following the title's vacancy, IGF hosted the World Grand Prix (World GP) as a revival tournament, explicitly divided into quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. Semifinal action occurred on August 27 at Ryogoku Kokugikan, setting up the December 31 finale at Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2015 in Osaka, where Oli Thompson captured the vacant IGF Championship and tournament victory via first-round knockout of Fernando Rodriguez Jr. at 2:08. This structure mirrored earlier efforts but emphasized knockout-heavy resolutions, reflecting IGF's infrequent but high-stakes tournament approach amid financial constraints.[38][39]

Key Events Including Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye Series

The Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye series represented the flagship events of the Inoki Genome Federation, blending mixed martial arts competitions with strong-style professional wrestling matches in line with Antonio Inoki's vision of "genome" integration across combat sports. These annual spectacles, often held on New Year's Eve at the Ryōgoku Kokugikan in Tokyo, Japan, drew significant crowds and featured international talent, continuing a tradition Inoki pioneered in the 1970s.[3][10] IGF's debut event, Toukon Bom-Ba-Ye, took place on June 29, 2007, at Ryōgoku Kokugikan, marking the promotion's entry into hybrid combat entertainment with a card that included both worked and shoot elements.[3] Subsequent Bom-Ba-Ye events solidified the series' focus on open-weight title bouts and grand prix tournaments, with main events frequently pitting Japanese strongmen against global MMA veterans. For instance, the 2012 edition on December 31 at Ryōgoku Kokugikan highlighted IGF's international outreach.[10]
EventDateLocationMain Event
IGF Toukon Bom-Ba-YeJune 29, 2007Ryōgoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, JapanVaried card with hybrid matches[3]
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2013December 31, 2013Ryōgoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, JapanSatoshi Ishii vs. Kazuyuki Fujita (Open Weight Title)[40][30]
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2014December 31, 2014Ryōgoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, JapanMirko Filipović vs. Satoshi Ishii (Open Weight Title)[41][3]
Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2015December 31, 2015Ryōgoku Kokugikan, Tokyo, JapanKleber Rodrigues Jr. vs. Ben Thompson (KO/TKO, Round 1, 2:08)[42][3]
In 2012, IGF expanded the Bom-Ba-Ye brand internationally with the Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye World Series in Pakistan, holding shows on December 2 in Lahore and December 5 in Peshawar's Arbab Niaz Stadium, which drew 25,000 spectators for matches including Kendo Kashin vs. Akira Jo. Following a period of reduced activity after 2015, a collaborative event titled Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye × Ganryujima occurred on December 28, 2022, at Ryōgoku Kokugikan, featuring 10 fights under varied rulesets as a tribute amid the promotion's earlier cessation in 2019.[3][43]

Controversies and Criticisms

Booking and Match Quality Disputes

IGF's booking under Antonio Inoki prioritized a hybrid format blending professional wrestling and mixed martial arts, often resulting in matches criticized for inconsistency, mismatches, and execution flaws. Reviewers noted that events like Inoki Genome Fight 2 in 2009 featured wrestling bouts that, while competent, were frequently described as bland and lacking dynamism, with only select tags providing entertainment value.[44] Similarly, the 2014 Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye event included bouts marred by miscommunication, such as a main event where participants struggled with cues, contributing to perceptions of amateurish quality despite the promotion's ambitions.[45] Disputes arose over the legitimacy of outcomes, as Inoki's vision—termed "Inokism"—favored protégés like Kazuyuki Fujita and Naoya Ogawa in bouts against imported MMA specialists, echoing earlier NJPW-era criticisms where such integrations nearly collapsed the promotion due to mismatched styles and forced legitimacy claims.[46] Matches involving Bob Sapp, a recurring IGF attraction, exemplified these issues; Sapp's encounters, often against judokas or wrestlers under ambiguous rules, were faulted for prioritizing spectacle over competitive integrity, with post-match brawls (e.g., versus Josh Barnett in 2010) highlighting unresolved tensions between scripted elements and real aggression.[47] Critics contended this approach undermined match quality, as rule sets failed to bridge the shoot-work divide, leading to unsafe or unconvincing performances that alienated purists from both wrestling and MMA communities.[17] Some events even saw cancellations attributed to contract disputes, with audiences informed of phantom losses to maintain kayfabe, further eroding trust in booking transparency.[48]

Financial and Organizational Issues

The Inoki Genome Federation experienced organizational instability stemming from leadership transitions and familial conflicts within the Inoki family. In 2017, founder Antonio Inoki established the separate promotion ISM while distancing himself from IGF day-to-day operations, culminating in his full departure and sale of his stake in 2018; his son-in-law Simon Inoki, who had served as a director and assumed greater management responsibilities, continued to oversee the promotion thereafter.[12][49] These shifts exacerbated existing tensions, including disputes between Antonio and Simon Inoki that had already prompted the abrupt closure of the affiliated Next Exciting Wrestling (NEW) entity after just three months of operation in July 2017.[50] Financial pressures compounded these issues, as IGF struggled with sustainability in a competitive Japanese combat sports landscape dominated by larger entities like New Japan Pro-Wrestling. The promotion's hybrid wrestling-MMA model, while innovative, failed to generate consistent revenue streams sufficient for long-term viability, leading to its official cessation of operations on January 9, 2019, after 12 years.[1] Post-closure, IGF's parent entity, Assist Co., Ltd., pivoted to unrelated ventures such as a chain of bakeries, signaling underlying economic distress and an inability to maintain the original business model. Simon Inoki later remarked on this transition in jest, noting that IGF had effectively "become a bakery shop," underscoring the promotion's operational collapse.[11] This outcome echoed broader patterns in Inoki's career, where ambitious but mismanaged ventures, including prior financial strains at New Japan Pro-Wrestling, had previously necessitated restructurings or divestitures.[51]

Legacy and Impact

Influence on Puroresu and MMA Crossover

The Inoki Genome Federation (IGF), established by Antonio Inoki in 2007, advanced the integration of professional wrestling (puroresu) with mixed martial arts (MMA) through hybrid event formats that featured both scripted matches and legitimate fights on the same cards.[16][52] This approach built on Inoki's longstanding "Inokism" philosophy, which emphasized wrestling as a legitimate combat discipline capable of competing with martial arts, as seen in his earlier New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) experiments. IGF events, such as the annual Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye series starting from 2007, showcased wrestlers like Bob Sapp and Kazuyuki Fujita alongside MMA specialists, often under modified rules that allowed grappling, strikes, and submissions to blur the boundaries between entertainment and reality.[53][54] IGF's emphasis on strong style puroresu—characterized by stiff strikes, kicks, and joint locks derived from judo and karate—influenced the evolution of Japanese wrestling by encouraging performers to adopt more authentic fighting techniques to withstand crossover bouts. The promotion's IGF Championship, initially defended in puroresu matches, transitioned to include MMA-rule defenses by December 31, 2013, exemplifying this fusion and pressuring wrestlers to cross-train in real combat sports.[55] This hybrid model exposed limitations when puroresu athletes faced trained MMA fighters, resulting in high-profile losses and injuries that underscored the need for enhanced conditioning, as Inoki himself advocated sending wrestlers to MMA gyms for legitimacy.[4] Despite criticisms of mismatched bookings that occasionally damaged performer credibility, IGF's format sustained audience interest in combat sports amid the decline of promotions like Pride FC, fostering a spectator base accustomed to spectacle-driven legitimacy.[56] The crossover legacy of IGF extended to broader Japanese combat entertainment, inspiring subsequent promotions to incorporate wrestling aesthetics into MMA events, such as RIZIN's theatrical presentations with celebrity fighters and rule variations. By positioning puroresu as a foundational element of MMA's development in Japan—tracing back to Inoki's 1976 bout with Muhammad Ali—IGF reinforced the notion that wrestling techniques could inform hybrid fighting styles, influencing modern strong style exponents in NJPW to prioritize resilience against strikes and ground work.[57][52] This integration, while not without financial and competitive setbacks, contributed to a cultural acceptance of blurred genres, where puroresu evolved toward greater realism without fully abandoning kayfabe.[58]

Post-Closure Relevance and Inoki's Broader Contributions

The Inoki Genome Federation concluded its operations on January 9, 2019, marking the end of its run as a hybrid wrestling and MMA promotion after 12 years.[1] Following the closure, direct activities under the IGF banner diminished, with its parent company Assist Co., Ltd. redirecting efforts toward unrelated ventures such as a bakery chain. Inoki himself had withdrawn from active involvement years earlier, launching the separate ISM promotion in 2017 before fully departing IGF in 2018.[1] In August 2022, as Inoki contended with terminal illness, he briefly repurposed the IGF name into the Inoki Genki Factory as a management entity for his personal affairs, though this revival did not restore promotional events.[11] The promotion's legacy of blending scripted wrestling with legitimate combat techniques retained niche interest among fans of shoot-style and inter-promotional challenges, occasionally referenced in discussions of puroresu's evolution toward MMA influences. Antonio Inoki's contributions extended far beyond wrestling promotions into politics and diplomacy, where he leveraged his celebrity for tangible outcomes. Elected to Japan's House of Councillors in 1989 under his own Sports and Peace Party, Inoki held the seat through multiple terms, focusing on sports policy and international relations until 2019.[59] Notably, in 1990, he negotiated directly with Saddam Hussein, securing the release of 36 Japanese hostages detained in Iraq ahead of the Gulf War through a combination of personal appeals and organized peace events.[60][61] Inoki also pursued dialogue with North Korea, undertaking over 30 visits to foster sports exchanges and normalization talks, though these efforts drew criticism for overlooking unresolved issues like citizen abductions.[60][62] His approach emphasized "sports peace," hosting international matches and festivals to bridge geopolitical divides, reflecting a consistent theme from his wrestling career of using combat sports for broader advocacy.[5]

References

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