Gran Hamada: Difference between revisions
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|titles=BJW Heavyweight Championship, [[NWA World Middleweight Championship]], APEX OF TRIANGLE Six–Man Tag Team Championship (w/[[The Great Sasuke]] & [[Tiger Mask IV]]), NWA Americas Heavyweight Championship, UWA/UWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship (w/[[The Great Sasuke]]), UWF Super Middleweight Championship, [[WWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship]], WWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship (w/[[Perro Aguayo]]), [[UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship]] (4), [[UWA World Light Heavyweight Championship]] (2), [[UWA World Middleweight Championship]] (3), [[UWA World Tag Team Championship]] (3) (1 w/[[Riki Choshu]], 1 w/[[Perro Aguayo]] and 1 w/[[Kendo]]), [[UWA World Welterweight Championship]], [[WWF Light Heavyweight Championship]] (2) | |titles=BJW Heavyweight Championship, [[NWA World Middleweight Championship]], APEX OF TRIANGLE Six–Man Tag Team Championship (w/[[The Great Sasuke]] & [[Tiger Mask IV]]), NWA Americas Heavyweight Championship, UWA/UWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship (w/[[The Great Sasuke]]), UWF Super Middleweight Championship, [[WWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship]], WWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship (w/[[Perro Aguayo]]), [[UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship]] (4), [[UWA World Light Heavyweight Championship]] (2), [[UWA World Middleweight Championship]] (3), [[UWA World Tag Team Championship]] (3) (1 w/[[Riki Choshu]], 1 w/[[Perro Aguayo]] and 1 w/[[Kendo]]), [[UWA World Welterweight Championship]], [[WWF Light Heavyweight Championship]] (2) | ||
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{{WONHOF}} | |||
< | <big>[https://thecubsfan.com/cmll/2025/02/17/gran-hamada-1950-2025-alberto-vikingo-cmll-fantasticamania-farwell-show/ LuchaBlog Obituary:]</big> | ||
The legendary Gran Hamada (Hiroaki Hamada, 74) passed away on Saturday. Hamada had returned to Mexico a couple of years ago; he’d been in declining health and decided he wanted to spend what time he had left with his family who lived in Mexico. His daughter [[Ayako Hamada|Ayako]] appeared to be his primary caregiver. She had celebrated when he was released from the hospital a couple of weeks ago and ended up being the one who had to post the note about him passing away. Ayako called Hiroaki the best wrestler and the best father. There was a service for Gran Hamada in San Luis Potosi, where the family was living, and there will be an additional service in Mexico City at a date to be announced. | |||
[https://www.voicesofwrestling.com/2025/02/15/the-life-career-enduring-legacy-of-gran-hamada/ Case Lowe has an excellent obituary] you should read. There’s nothing I can do that’s going to be anything besides a lesser version of that, so I’ll just add some stray thoughts. | |||
* Japanese wrestlers came through Mexico prior Gran Hamada, but they were largely cast-offs or wanderers. Japan was just another place with professional wrestlers, the same as the people who might have flowed through Mexico from Spain, the US, or various South American countries. Hamada is the point where Japanese wrestling starts to be held in high regard by Mexican fans and Mexican wrestlers as something beyond what Mexican wrestlers were doing. The generation of Mexican wrestlers that saw Hamada and [[Satoru Sayama|Sayama]] after him were influenced by Japan – by going there and tracking down VHS tapes for some. Hamada brought Mexican influences to Japan, and he did the other way for Mexico as well. | |||
* Promociones Mora ([[UWA]]) took great advantage of the availability of lighter-weight wrestlers, the ones that EMLL largely had no use for. My favorite example is always [[Blackman]], a prelim wrestler under multiple identities who was never going to get pushed in EMLL, and became a touring singles champion because a second promotion opened. I will always wonder if the early success of Hamada gave them the confidence that the size issue wasn’t as big a deal as they thought. Maybe everyone would’ve gotten there eventually, but one successful short wrestler undoubtedly helped open the door for everyone who followed him. | |||
* CMLL did not do a moment of applause for Gran Hamada on any of their shows. They did not put up a graphic to remember him. [[AAA]] did both. [[IWRG]] held a moment of applause, as did other groups. CMLL’s blunder will be corrected on Wednesday. [[NJPW]] will open the first show of the [[Fantastica Mania]] tour with Hamada’s photo in the ring. CMLL can say they’re part of it, too. Hamada wrestled sparingly in CMLL rings, and all of his appearances seem to be as a UWA representative, CMLL could argue he was never truly a CMLL wrestler. That does not matter. He’s a legend and a guy who connected Mexican and Japanese wrestling as they’re about to embark on their annual tour of Japanese wrestling. The cost of creating a graphic with someone’s name and two dates on it and pushing it out on social media is minimal. The cost of not doing the little things, of coming off cold and unfeeling, is much greater. You should always just do the graphic. | |||
* This is fairly irrelevant, but I think [[Max Star]] is Max Star because of Gran Hamada. He was Little Star before CMLL officially brought him on board. Going Little to Max sounds like [[José Luis Feliciano|the old UWA wrestler who’s in charge of programming]] might have drawn from the past. | |||
* Ayako wrestled as scheduled Sunday night in [[Nuevo Leon]]’s [[Arena Mezquital]]. That’s a luchador for you. I hope she can take some time for herself to grieve and recover. The stress and the emotional weight of caring for a family member who can no longer care for themselves is heavy and a weight you don’t totally comprehend until it’s no longer there (and feel guilty it’s no longer there). I hope she and her entire family find some peace. | |||
== Luchas de apuestas record == | == Luchas de apuestas record == | ||
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== Gallery == | == Gallery == | ||
{{Gallery|name=Gran-hamada.png|caption=}} | |||
{{Gallery|name=Granhamada.png|caption=}} | |||
{{Gallery|name=Granhamada.jpg|caption=1984}} | {{Gallery|name=Granhamada.jpg|caption=1984}} | ||
{{Gallery|name=NWAMEDIO84.jpg|caption=Winning [[NWA World Middleweight Championship]] @ Toreo}} | {{Gallery|name=NWAMEDIO84.jpg|caption=Winning [[NWA World Middleweight Championship]] @ Toreo}} | ||
{{Gallery|name=Granhamada02.jpg|caption=1992}} | {{Gallery|name=Granhamada02.jpg|caption=1992}} | ||
{{Gallery|name=Granhamada01.jpg|caption=circa 2000}} | {{Gallery|name=Granhamada01.jpg|caption=circa 2000}} | ||
<Br clear=all> | |||
{{Gallery|name=Mini Love Machine.jpg|caption=As Mini Love Machine}} | {{Gallery|name=Mini Love Machine.jpg|caption=As Mini Love Machine}} | ||
[[Category:ECW wrestlers]] | [[Category:ECW wrestlers]] | ||
Latest revision as of 17:33, 22 June 2026
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The legendary Gran Hamada (Hiroaki Hamada, 74) passed away on Saturday. Hamada had returned to Mexico a couple of years ago; he’d been in declining health and decided he wanted to spend what time he had left with his family who lived in Mexico. His daughter Ayako appeared to be his primary caregiver. She had celebrated when he was released from the hospital a couple of weeks ago and ended up being the one who had to post the note about him passing away. Ayako called Hiroaki the best wrestler and the best father. There was a service for Gran Hamada in San Luis Potosi, where the family was living, and there will be an additional service in Mexico City at a date to be announced.
Case Lowe has an excellent obituary you should read. There’s nothing I can do that’s going to be anything besides a lesser version of that, so I’ll just add some stray thoughts.
- Japanese wrestlers came through Mexico prior Gran Hamada, but they were largely cast-offs or wanderers. Japan was just another place with professional wrestlers, the same as the people who might have flowed through Mexico from Spain, the US, or various South American countries. Hamada is the point where Japanese wrestling starts to be held in high regard by Mexican fans and Mexican wrestlers as something beyond what Mexican wrestlers were doing. The generation of Mexican wrestlers that saw Hamada and Sayama after him were influenced by Japan – by going there and tracking down VHS tapes for some. Hamada brought Mexican influences to Japan, and he did the other way for Mexico as well.
- Promociones Mora (UWA) took great advantage of the availability of lighter-weight wrestlers, the ones that EMLL largely had no use for. My favorite example is always Blackman, a prelim wrestler under multiple identities who was never going to get pushed in EMLL, and became a touring singles champion because a second promotion opened. I will always wonder if the early success of Hamada gave them the confidence that the size issue wasn’t as big a deal as they thought. Maybe everyone would’ve gotten there eventually, but one successful short wrestler undoubtedly helped open the door for everyone who followed him.
- CMLL did not do a moment of applause for Gran Hamada on any of their shows. They did not put up a graphic to remember him. AAA did both. IWRG held a moment of applause, as did other groups. CMLL’s blunder will be corrected on Wednesday. NJPW will open the first show of the Fantastica Mania tour with Hamada’s photo in the ring. CMLL can say they’re part of it, too. Hamada wrestled sparingly in CMLL rings, and all of his appearances seem to be as a UWA representative, CMLL could argue he was never truly a CMLL wrestler. That does not matter. He’s a legend and a guy who connected Mexican and Japanese wrestling as they’re about to embark on their annual tour of Japanese wrestling. The cost of creating a graphic with someone’s name and two dates on it and pushing it out on social media is minimal. The cost of not doing the little things, of coming off cold and unfeeling, is much greater. You should always just do the graphic.
- This is fairly irrelevant, but I think Max Star is Max Star because of Gran Hamada. He was Little Star before CMLL officially brought him on board. Going Little to Max sounds like the old UWA wrestler who’s in charge of programming might have drawn from the past.
- Ayako wrestled as scheduled Sunday night in Nuevo Leon’s Arena Mezquital. That’s a luchador for you. I hope she can take some time for herself to grieve and recover. The stress and the emotional weight of caring for a family member who can no longer care for themselves is heavy and a weight you don’t totally comprehend until it’s no longer there (and feel guilty it’s no longer there). I hope she and her entire family find some peace.
Luchas de apuestas record
Gallery







