Goodbye Hayabusa II: Hayabusa Graduation Ceremony

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Goodbye_Hayabusa_II:_Hayabusa_Graduation_Ceremony an entity of type: Thing

Goodbye Hayabusa II: Hayabusa Graduation Ceremony was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW). The event was taped on August 23, 1999 and aired on pay-per-view via broadcast delay on DirecTV on August 25. This event was a part of the Goodbye Hayabusa tour used as build-up to the retirement of Eiji Ezaki's "Hayabusa" character and switch to a new character. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Goodbye Hayabusa II: Hayabusa Graduation Ceremony
rdf:langString Goodbye Hayabusa II: Graduation Ceremony
rdf:langString Goodbye Hayabusa II: Graduation Ceremony
xsd:integer 55917724
xsd:integer 1065277259
xsd:integer 2150
rdf:langString Korakuen Hall
rdf:langString Broadcast:
rdf:langString Taping date:
rdf:langString Masato Tanaka and Ricky Fuji defeated Kodo Fuyuki and Shoichi Arai
rdf:langString Giant Steele defeated Yoshinori Sasaki
rdf:langString Hayabusa defeated Yukihiro Kanemura
rdf:langString Kaori Nakayama defeated Emi Motokawa
rdf:langString Tetsuhiro Kuroda and Hisakatsu Oya defeated Koji Nakagawa and Gedo
rdf:langString Mr. Gannosuke and Jado defeated Flying Kid Ichihara and Naohiko Yamazaki via submission
rdf:langString Tag team match
rdf:langString Singles match
rdf:langString Tag team match for the WEW World Tag Team Championship
rdf:langString Singles match for the FMW Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship
<second> 1108.0 318.0 435.0 48.0 1132.0 581.0
rdf:langString Goodbye Hayabusa II: Hayabusa Graduation Ceremony was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW). The event was taped on August 23, 1999 and aired on pay-per-view via broadcast delay on DirecTV on August 25. This event was a part of the Goodbye Hayabusa tour used as build-up to the retirement of Eiji Ezaki's "Hayabusa" character and switch to a new character. In the main event of the show, Hayabusa defeated Yukihiro Kanemura to win the FMW Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship. The event also featured the in-ring debut of Giant Steele, who debuted at Haunted House to assist Shoichi Arai in defeating Ricky Fuji.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4457

data from the linked data cloud