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NJPW's Forgotten 1972 Real World Championship


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Imagine starting a company in your garage, declaring yourself "Employee of the Month," and propping up an old bowling trophy from ten years ago to prove it. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of the Real World Championship, the first and most bizarre top prize of New Japan Pro Wrestling. We unpack the "Ohio Hand-Me-Down," analyzing how a newly established NJPW in 1972 bypassed the hard work of building a legacy by recycling a physical belt from a defunct regional American territory. We examine the "Startup Chaos" of the inaugural champion, Carl Gotch, who held the title for nine months without a single defense, and the subsequent six-day reign of Antonio Inoki. By analyzing the involvement of special guest referee Lou Thesz in a murky count-out title change, we reveal the "Duct-Tape Solutions" used to protect fragile athletic auras. Join us as we navigate the transition from this unceremoniously abandoned experiment to the world-renowned NWF and IWGP eras, proving that even the most prestigious lineages in Wrestling History often begin with a borrowed belt and an improvised blueprint.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The AWA Ohio Connection: Analyzing how NJPW utilized a recycled regional belt from 1962 to manufacture instant credibility for a brand-new promotion in 1972 Tokyo.
  • Retrofitting Past Glory: Deconstructing the decision to "declare" Carl Gotch champion based on a decade-old resume rather than conducting an inaugural tournament.
  • The Lou Thesz Band-Aid: Exploring the use of external prestige to validate a convoluted count-out finish between Gotch and Inoki, protecting the mystique of the performers.
  • The 6-Day Statistical Anomaly: A look at Antonio Inoki’s record-breaking short reign, during which he became the only man in history to actually defend the title (against "Red Pimpernel").
  • The Great Ghosting: Analyzing the organizational behavior of "abandoning" a top prize without formal announcement, a strategic pivot that paved the way for the more structurally sound NWF era.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/16/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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