Isao Takagi

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Isao Takagi (高木功 Takagi Isao), who goes by the stage name Arashi, is a Japanese professional wrestler who worked for All Japan Pro Wrestling.

[edit] Career

Takagi was a sumo wrestler under the name Takuetsuyama. In 1986 he quit sumo and joined AJPW upon an offer from owner Giant Baba. He made his debut in 1987. The same year he accompanied Baba to an excursion into Jim Crockett Promotions, where they competed in the Jim Crockett Sr. Memorial Cup. They made it into the semifinals before being defeated by Lex Luger and Tully Blanchard.

Takagi remained a strong member of the undercard, feuding with dojo classmates Akira Taue, Kenta Kobashi, Tsuyoshi Kikuchi and Tatsumi Kitahara. In 1990, however, he decided to follow former sumo Genichiro Tenryu out of AJPW and into a new promotion, Super World of Sports. After its collapse in 1992, Takagi wandered in the independents formed from it until settling down in the successor promotion, WAR.

In WAR he adopted the name Arashi (storm). His first success came teaming with Koki Kitahara (formerly known as Tatsumi), and with Nobutaka Araya, formerly of International Wrestling Association of Japan, to win the WAR 6-Man Tag Team Championship.

In 1998, as WAR went into decline due to Tenryu making a comeback in New Japan Pro Wrestling, Arashi went to Yoshiaki Yatsu's SPWF promotion. He stayed there until Tenryu called him back to AJPW in 2001. Initially he supported Tenryu's WAR faction, but after Tenryu left yet again, aligned himself with Keiji Mutoh, and won the AJPW Double Cup Tag Team Championship with him in 2003.

Arashi made the finals of the Champion's Carnival the same year, where he fell to Satoshi Kojima. He received a shot at AJPW Triple Crown champion Shinya Hashimoto, but was defeated.

After he and Mutoh lost the Double Cup to Kojima and Kaz Hayashi, Arashi was relegated back to the mid-card.

In September 2006, after a trial, Takagi was sentenced to three years in prison.

[edit] Championships and accomplishments

[edit] Sources

Article of him caught with cannabis.

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