Hiroto Wakita

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Hiroto Wakita
Statistics
Ring name(s) Super Delfin
Monkey Magic Wakita
Momotaro
Billed height 5 ft 7 in (175 cm)
Billed weight 190 lbs (95 kg)
Born September 22, 1967
Izumi, Osaka, Japan
Debut March 19, 1989


Hiroto Wakita is a Japanese professional wrestler who currently runs Osaka Pro Wrestling and is also working as a wrestler there. He is better known by his stage name Super Delfin.

Contents

[edit] Career

Hiroto Wakita joined the New Japan Pro Wrestling dojo. He was affiliated with the Takeshi Puroresu Gundan, a Japanese take on the "Rock n Wrestling" concept espoused by the WWF at the time in the United States, using comedian and director Takeshi Kitano as the manager of Riki Chōshū and others who had returned from All Japan Pro Wrestling. Due to the fans' non-acceptance of the angle, Kitano and New Japan parted ways, which left Wakita and his fellow dojo students, the future Jado and Gedo, without a home. The three men began training almost on their own, with Wally Yamaguchi as their trainer.

Eventually, Wakita and the others debuted as professional wrestlers in Amsterdam in 1989. At first he wrestled without a mask under the name Monkey Magic Wakita. He began his career in Japan in Frontier Martial Arts Wrestling, and then continued on to Universal Lucha Libre, where he adopted the Super Delfin character after a tour to Mexico. In 1993 he left Universal for Michinoku Pro Wrestling, and in 1994 he defeated El Pantera for the CMLL Welterweight Championship. However Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre did not acknowledge the change and declared the championship vacant because El Pantera had jumped to CMLL's competitor Asistencia Asesoría y Administración before leaving for Japan. Also in 1994 he competed in the Best of the Super Juniors Tournament organised by New Japan Pro Wrestling. He finished second by losing to Jushin Liger in the finals. He attempted to play mind games on Liger by dressing as him for the match.

He formed Osaka Pro Wrestling, a regional independent promotion in 1998, and the company had its first event April 29, 1999. He won the Super Welterweight Championship altogether five times, in Universal, Michinoku and Osaka Pro. In 1999 he abandoned that championship and replaced it with the Osaka Pro Wrestling Championship as the most prestigious Osaka Pro championship.

[edit] Wrestling Facts

[edit] Finishing and signature moves

[edit] Championships and accomplishments

  • Michinoku Pro Wrestling
  • 1-Time Tohoku Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • Osaka Pro Wrestling
  • 4-Time Osaka Pro Wrestling Champion
  • 5-Time Super Welterweight Champion (Abandoned title in 1999 and created the Osaka Pro Wrestling Championship)
  • Osaka Pro Ten-No-Zan Tournament winner (2001)
  • Osaka Pro Tag Festival Tournament winner (with Super Demekin) (2002)
  • 2-Time UWA Welterweight Champion
  • 2006: ranked #250
  • 2005: ranked #152
  • 2004: ranked #157
  • 2003: ranked #121
  • 2002: ranked #126
  • 2001: ranked #75
  • 2000: ranked #88
  • 1999: ranked #87
  • 1998: ranked #68
  • 1997: ranked #180
  • 1995: ranked #194
  • 1999: ranked #256

[edit] References

In other languages