Wrestlers brawl on bullet train in Japan
- A viral video of the world's first wrestling match on a Japanese bullet train is captivating netizens on social media.
- Professional Japanese wrestlers showcased their skills in this unique competition taking place inside a high-speed bullet train. The audience, consisting of passengers, cheered on the wrestlers as they fought in the aisle turned wrestling ring.
- Despite the challenge of maintaining the train's integrity, the organizers ensured that the wrestlers refrained from damaging any part of the train's interior. The match lasted approximately 30 minutes, and the victorious wrestler was 55-year-old Minoru Suzuki.
13 Articles
13 Articles
Japanese wrestlers bring chaos to aisle of speeding bullet train with all-out brawl
A train car turned into a wrestling ring on Monday 18 September, as Japanese professional fighters battled along a carriage aisle in what the organiser says was the first wrestling match held inside a bullet train. Dozens of spectators watched Minoru Suzuki and Sanshiro Takagi fight inside the Nozomi Shinkansen as the train took them from Tokyo to Nagoya running at speeds of up to 285 km/h. The event organiser - DDT Pro-Wrestling - rented out th…
Wrestlers pull punches in running Japanese bullet train
Interesting visuals are catching the imagination of netizens as they watch the world's first wrestling match being organised on a Japanese bullet train. A video of the viral wrestling fight is now going viral on social media platforms. So how was the event organiser, DDT Pro-Wrestling, able to pull off this astonishing feat?
Wrestlers brawl on packed Japanese bullet train
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Two hard hitting professional wrestlers swapped the ring for the rail on a super-fast Japanese bullet train. Veterans Minoru Suzuki and Sanshiro Takagi fought for around half an hour in a wild match in a very tight space as part of an unusual event organised by DDT Pro-Wrestling. According to JR Central, all 75 seat…
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