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Strongest-K Championship Promotion Kaientai Dojo Date established July 3, 2004 Current champion(s) Taishi Takizawa Date won October 15, 2017
The Strongest-K Championship is the top singles title in Kaientai Dojo . It has existed since 2004. The holder of the title is referred to as the "Champion of Strongest-K".
Title history [ ]
Reigns [ ]
As of December 31, 2021.
#
Order in reign history
Reign
The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed
Event
The event promoted by the respective promotion in which the titles were won
—
Used for vacated reigns so as not to count it as an official reign
+
Indicates the current reign is changing daily
#
Wrestler
Reign
Date
Days held
Location
Notes
Ref.
1
Hi69
1
July 3, 2004
70
Aqua City , Odaiba
Hi69 defeated Kengo Mashimo in the finals of a 16-man tournament to become the first champion.
2
Kaz Hayashi
1
September 11, 2004
121
Tokyo, Japan
3
Taka Michinoku
1
January 10, 2005
361
Tokyo, Japan
This match was also contested for the World Junior Heavyweight Championship .
4
1
January 6, 2006
276
Tokyo, Japan
5
Kengo Mashimo
1
October 9, 2006
552
Tokyo, Japan
6
Yuji Hino
1
April 13, 2008
118
Tokyo, Japan
7
Kengo Mashimo
2
August 9, 2008
246
Chiba, Japan
8
Taka Michinoku
2
April 12, 2009
188
Chiba, Japan
9
Kazma
1
October 18, 2009
301
Chiba, Japan
10
Yuji Hino
2
August 15, 2010
307
Chiba, Japan
11
Kengo Mashimo
3
June 18, 2011
431
Tokyo, Japan
12
Daisuke Sekimoto
1
August 22, 2012
83
Tokyo, Japan
13
Yuji Hino
3
November 13, 2012
152
Tokyo, Japan
14
Taishi Takizawa
1
April 14, 2013
79
Tokyo, Japan
/
Vacated
N/A
July 2, 2013
Chiba, Japan
The title was vacated after Takizawa was arrested for voyeurism .
15
Kengo Mashimo
4
September 1, 2013
224
Chiba, Japan
Defeated Ryuichi Sekine in the finals of a tournament to win the vacant title.
16
1
April 13, 2014
70
Tokyo, Japan
17
Miyawaki
1
June 22, 2014
63
Osaka, Japan
Won by referee stoppage after Inematsu dislocated his left shoulder. Initially, refused the title, but was officially recognized as the champion on June 25.
18
Kengo Mashimo
5
August 24, 2014
231
Chiba, Japan
19
Yuji Hino
4
April 12, 2015
147
Tokyo, Japan
20
Tank Nagai
1
September 6, 2015
329
Chiba, Japan
21
Kaji Tomato
1
July 31, 2016
20
Chiba, Japan
22
Kengo Mashimo
6
August 20, 2016
281
Chiba, Japan
23
Isami Kodaka
1
May 28, 2017
113
Tokyo, Japan
24
Tank Nagai
2
September 18, 2017
27
Tokyo, Japan
25
Taishi Takizawa
2
October 15, 2017
455
Tokyo, Japan
26
Shu Asakawa
1
January 13, 2019
1083
27
Ayato Yoshida
1
April 13, 2019
993+
Tokyo, Japan
[1]
List of combined reigns [ ]
December 31, 2021.
References [ ]
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