UWF Newborn –“Brazil Martial Arts Festival”
August 16th, 1990
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Ginásio Gilberto Cardoso
Attendance: 20,000 (sold out)
Broadcast: WOWOW (taped)
The WOWOW broadcast team greets the viewing audience, who are there live at ringside in Brazil. They talk about the highly anticipated event and note how it's the first major professional wrestling event in Brazil since the early 1980s. They break down tonight's card and highlight the debut of Giant Silva, Wallid Ismail, and Murilo Bustamante. They also note Aleksandr Karelin vs Naoya Ogawa, Atsushi Onita vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara, and the main event where Sayama will defend his title against Marco Ruas. Karl Gotch, Billy Robinson, and Lou Thesz are also there at the event and are seen at ringside. Various interviews are shown, including with fans who bought tickets to the event. Various wrestlers on tonight's card also give their thoughts, including Akira Maeda, Satoru Sayama, Marco Ruas, and Giant Silva. Karl Gotch is also seen discussing the importance of this event not only for Brazil, but for the world of professional wrestling in general. He views Brazil as a country with a rich history of combat sports, and that the amount of talent in the country is just waiting to be tapped. He shoots on the Gracies as well and calls them cowards for trying to disrupt the event. Lou Thez and Billy Robinson also give their thoughts on the event.
The broadcast switches to the official opening of the event, with Nobuyuki Furuta formally commencing the proceedings. The UWF theme plays in the arena, and the crowd goes crazy as the wrestlers make their way to the ring. Akira Maeda, Marco Ruas, Satoru Sayama, Atsushi Onita, and Aleksandr Karelin all give some remarks, which are, of course, translated too. Finally, some notable figures from the world of Luta Livre and Vale Tudo are greeted in the ring and are given some awards by Akira Maeda and other UWF representatives. Akira Maeda says he would like to have a minute of silence for Ivan Gomes, a Brazilian Vale Tudo pioneer who wrestled in Japan during the 1970s. Gomes had unfortunately passed away earlier in March 1990. Maeda also holds up a portrait of Gomes. After a minute, the crowd applauds, and the event is ready to get started.
Giant Silva vs Tatsuo Nakano
The Ginásio Gilberto Cardoso had eagerly anticipated the opening match, and were ready to go as they greeted the man known as Giant Silva. Silva marched slowly to the ring with a look of confidence. The 7’2 big man was a towering presence, a bit lanky but also with some muscle for balance. Tatsuo Nakano entered next and seemed a bit wary of the big unknown standing in front of him in the ring. Nobuyuki Furuta made the ring introductions, with the translator following afterward. Yuji Shimada made quick checks on both men and called for the bell soon afterward to kick off the historic event.
Nakano darted in and out, testing Silva’s reach with low kicks and quick palm strikes to the midsection, but Giant Silva’s sheer size made it difficult to find a safe avenue to approach from. Silva, calm and deliberate, used his long arms to push Nakano back toward the ropes, eventually trapping him in a clinch where heavy knees to the ribs thudded audibly in the arena. With nowhere to go, Nakano felt the full force of Silva’s sharp knees and quickly went down for the first ten count of the match. Nakano got up quickly and didn’t hesitate to go back to work. Silva attempted to go in for another standing clinch, but Nakano managed to slip free, landing a sharp low kick and a couple of body shots before circling out. Giant Silva did not seem bothered and continued to stalk his opponent. Midway through the match, Silva caught him rushing in and wrapped him in a crushing collar tie, forcing him into the corner where more knees and forearm smashes landed. The size disparity became increasingly apparent as Nakano had no answer for Giant Silva’s reach and size. Silva made quick work of Nakano again. Nakano collapsed to the mat, and Shimada initiated another ten-count. Leading 2-0 on points, it was quite apparent that Silva was raw but impressively forceful in his approach. When Nakano tried to shoot for a takedown, Silva sprawled, muscled him upright, and delivered a heavy palm strike to the face that sent the smaller man stumbling to the mat for a third knockdown. The crowd roared as Nakano rose at eight, defiant but visibly shaken. Silva’s palm strike caught him in the nose, and blood started to pour out, much to the delight of the fans sitting near ringside. Silva had a commanding 3-0 lead and seemed to enjoy bossing around his opponent. Silva closed in another clinch, leading to a driving knee that bent Nakano forward. Silva worked in a few body punches for good measure as Nakano went down again for a 4th knockdown. Nakano was getting battered and took his time to get up again before beating the count from Shimada. A final sharp palm strike to the side of the head sent him crumpling to the canvas, the referee immediately stepping in to signal a TKO at the ten-minute mark. The hometown crowd erupted in approval for the Brazilian giant, whose raw power proved too much for Nakano tonight. Perhaps Nakano simply didn’t know what to expect from the former basketball Olympian. Giant Silva defeats Nakano via TKO, 10:04
Murilo Bustamante vs Yoji Anjo
Yoji Anjo would be the next UWF wrestler to face quite a bit of an unknown tonight. Murilo Bustamante was a well-rounded Vale Tudo fighter recruited by Marco Ruas. Despite Bustamante’s background in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, the Brazilian grew closer to Ruas’ orbit after a political fallout with the Gracie family. He had a good opportunity tonight to make a name for himself against Yoji Anjo. After the introductions and checks were made, Shimada called for the bell to commence the match. The Brazilian maintained an upright stance while Anjo circled and flicked probing low kicks. Bustamante answered with sharp, straight palm strikes to the body, using his boxing background to keep Anjo from closing in. Anjo managed to slip inside for a quick clinch, landing short knees before breaking away, but Bustamante immediately reasserted control with a clean double jab to the midsection followed by a level change into a smooth inside trip. The takedown drew applause, but Anjo scrambled well, using his agility to reach to scramble out of Bustamante’s grip and roll towards the ropes for a clean break. Resetting in the center ring, Anjo tried to increase tempo with flurries of palm strikes to the head, forcing Bustamante to cover and counter with a stiff body punch that made Anjo recoil. Bustamante started to get a better feel for his opponent, and Anjo seemed to be a bit outclassed when Bustamante got the opportunity to take his opponent to the mat. Bustamante’s positional sense was top-tier, and Anjo struggled as he attempted to defend Bustamante’s timing at picking limbs and angles to attack. Bustamante was especially formidable with his counterwork, and Anjo could get little going. After exhausting a few rope breaks, Anjo was down 2-0 on points by the five-minute mark and seemed a bit desperate as time moved forward. Smelling an opportunity, Bustamante pressured forward, clinching against the ropes and hitting another crisp takedown into side control. This time, he locked his weight down, his hips pinning Anjo’s escape attempts. As Anjo attempted to defend from his back, Bustamante slid his arm under the neck, transitioning fluidly into an arm-triangle choke. Anjo kicked his legs and shifted to relieve the pressure, but Bustamante’s positioning was textbook. The crowd cheered with anticipation as the choke deepened; Anjo’s resistance slowed, his movements weakened until Shimada saw enough and intervented, calling for the bell in the process. Bustamante lept up and celebrated by jumping on the nearest turnbuckle while Anjo remained on the canvas almost motionless before slowly recovering. Bustamante defeats Anjo via submission (arm triangle choke), 9:42
Wallid Ismail vs Eugenio Tadeu
The next match saw two hometown heroes facing off for bragging rights, with a potential for a violent match quite high between two Vale Tudo specialists. Neither wasted much time once the bell rang to begin the contest. Ismail forward instantly, closing the gap before Tadeu could set his rhythm. They locked in a tight clinch. Ismail peppered in short palm strikes to the head and body before hitting a well-timed inside trip. He landed in side control, driving his shoulder into Tadeu’s jaw and threatening with an arm-triangle choke. The crowd gasped as Tadeu twisted desperately, eventually reaching the ropes for the first rope break of the match. Resetting in the center ring, Tadeu’s capoeira-inflected footwork became more pronounced, weaving side-to-side with feints and light kicks to probe Ismail’s defenses. Ismail, undeterred, cut him off and secured another takedown, this time into half guard, where he worked for a keylock. Tadeu’s hips shifted suddenly, and in a slick reversal, he swept to top position. Rather than engage with Ismail’s highly respected grappling defense, Tadeu popped back to his feet and taunted Ismail to get back up. Ismail smiled and obliged. Tadeu used swift lateral movement to try and get Ismail off his preferred stance. Tadeu landed some sharp low kicks, which seemed to slightly bother Ismail despite his attempts to hide it. Tadeu attempted to clinch for a flying armbar setup, but Ismail defended well and seemed to know what Tadeu was trying to do. Ismail twisted around to gain control of Tadeu’s back and went for an inside trip to establish back control on the canvas. The crowd cheered as Tadeu was forced to go for another rope break to ward off a rear-naked choke attempt. Leading 1-0 on points, the first seven minutes belonged largely to Ismail. Although after the reset, Tadeu seemed to establish more of a rhythm as he landed more hard strikes on his opponent, and managed to secure a single-leg takedown that established an opportunity for Tadeu to try for a heel hook, forcing Ismail to the ropes for his first rope break.
The tide turned sharply just past the ten-minute mark. Tadeu feinted a low kick, drawing Ismail forward, then exploded upward with a switch knee that cracked flush against the jaw. Ismail went down in a heap. Yuji Shimada counted to seven before he found his feet, clearly shaken. The crowd, sensing blood, erupted as Tadeu paced back and forth. Back on his feet, Ismaill tried to re-establish a clinch to buy more time, but Tadeu sprawled hard, stuffing the entry and firing knees into the ribs before breaking away. Now fully in control, Tadeu attacked in bursts, landing a stinging palm strike to the face followed by a quick step-off angle kick to the body. Ismail staggered but pressed forward stubbornly, only to eat a perfectly timed spinning back kick to the midsection that dropped him to his knees for the second knockdown. Tadeu was now leading 2-1 on points. The referee’s count reached six before Ismail stood, but his legs were unsteady. Tadeu closed the distance with the confidence of a man who knew the finish was at hand. A short exchange in the pocket ended with Tadeu slipping a wild palm strike and countering with a brutal high kick to the temple. Ismaill crumpled backward, and Shimada initiated the final ten-count as Ismail was unable to get up before it finished. The crowd cheered wildly as Tadeu’s hand was raised. Tadeu defeats Ismail via KO, 12:19
Casemiro “Rei Zulu” Martins vs Salman Hashimikov
The crowd continued to be invested as the next match featured two international stars whose approaches to wrestling could not have been more different. Salman Hashimikov was a Soviet wrestling champion, trained in freestyle wrestling. The powerful Chechen was burly and a bit of an exotic sight for the Brazilian fans in attendance. Casemiro Martins was a Vale Tudo champion who had made a name for himself in the 1980s through a feud with Rickson Gracie. Martins was a powerful man himself who had blended indigenous techniques with traditional wrestling and street fighting. This would be a true “styles makes fights” bout. Zulu was the first to advance, bouncing lightly on his feet in a Capoeira rhythm, throwing off Hashimikov’s early attempts to measure distance. A series of darting feints drew the Soviet into reaching for a clinch, only for Zulu to pivot and fire a sharp body punch to the ribs that drove Hashimikov a step back. The crowd cheered as Martins taunted his opponent. The early minutes saw Martins continue playing to the crowd, swaying and shifting as if to dance, then lunging forward with wild palm strikes to force Hashimikov into defensive ties. A sudden bodylock takedown from Martins sent the Soviet to the mat, and Martins maintained his grip as he threw Hashimikov back with a raw Vale Tudo throw. The impact was enough to stun Hashimikov and keep him down for the first ten count of the match, but the Soviet quickly got back on his feet. Hashimikov responded by tightening his stance, smothering space, and forcing Zulu into a grueling upper-body battle. A clean rope break came after a prolonged tie-up near the corner. The tempo changed soon after as Hashimikov timed Martin’s entry perfectly, exploding with a belly-to-belly suplex that brought the Brazilian down hard for his first knockdown. The crowd gasped as Hashimikov displayed his brute strength against a man who might be among the few to claim they could match Hashimikov’s power. With the match tied 1-1, Martins got up quickly, but the impact had slowed his footwork just enough for Hashimikov to begin closing the distance with more authority. When Martins attempted another rushing clinch, Hashimikov shifted his hips and delivered a thudding uranage that forced a second knockdown on the Brazilian. This time, Martins seemed a bit shellshocked as Hashimikov returned the favor and taunted his opponent, with the crowd inside the arena at a fever pitch. Martins beat Ryogaku Wada’s ten count by the count of five and got signaled he was ready to continue.
From here, the match settled into a bit of back and forth. Martins still had moments of control, using short knees and palm strikes inside the clinch to open space for another powerful body tackle. Martins established control on the mat and made Hashimikov work as he attempted to gain control of his back for a rear-naked choke. Hashimikov managed to fend him off and roll to the ropes for a clean break. The crowd roared each time Martins surged forward, but Hashimikov did not relent. A third knockdown for Martins came when Hashimikov caught him in mid-spin and launched him with a high-angle German suplex, the Brazilian landing hard and taking a seven-count to recover. Hashimikov took command with a 3-1 on points, and fatigue was now evident in Martin’s movements. His earlier looseness was replaced by heavier steps. Hashimikov resumed his advance on Martins, dumping him again with a side suplex before dragging him into the center for a grinding half-nelson ride. Martins fought the grip, but his arms were weak, and Hashimikov methodically transitioned into a neck crank before rolling into a seated arm-triangle choke. The pressure forced Martins flat, and the Soviet’s weight kept him pinned and gasping for air. Martin’s hand tapped the canvas, giving Hashimikov the submission victory in hostile territory. While the crowd showed disappointment at their hero’s defeat, they also acknowledged Hashimikov’s impressive display of athletic skill. Hashimikov defeats Martins via submission (arm triangle choke), 12:04
Aleksandr Karelin vs Naoya Ogawa
The heavily publicized debut of Aleksandr Karelin in Brazil created a lot of buzz before the event, with Brazilian fans anxious to get their first glimpse of the 1988 Olympic gold medalist. Karelin was greeted by loud cheers from the fans as he made his way towards the ring. Naoya Ogawa had a lower profile, but there was still a ton of curiosity about his status as one of the most promising young Judokas in the world. After the referee made his checks and called for the bell, Karelin and Ogawa squared off, the size of the Soviet wrestler contrasting with the gi-clad frame of the young Judoka. The opening stretch saw both men measure each other out to gain a feel for their respective strategies. Ogawa probed Karelin’s arms in search of an opening to turn his balance. Karelin remained immovable, content to stalk forward and corral Ogawa into clinches where his Greco-Roman tie-ups began to smother the youngster’s mobility. Ogawa responded with sharp palm strikes to the chest, stinging shots meant to back the Russian off, before darting into an attempted harai-goshi. Karelin’s balance proved otherworldly, the attempt ending with him muscling Ogawa across the ring into the ropes, where a clean break was called. Karelin seemed unbreakable, but Ogawa still searched for an opening. Perhaps a bit too confident, Karelin relaxed his defense, which allowed Ogawa to establish some momentum as he launched a few palm strikes to get his opponent off his game. The Judo prodigy managed the first significant moment when he baited Karelin forward and snapped into a lightning-quick seoi-nage, dumping the Olympic gold medalist hard to the canvas. The building erupted, recognizing the danger posed by Ogawa’s explosiveness and in awe of Karelin being thrown to the canvas. Karelin got up quickly, shaking out his shoulders, and resumed his inexorable pressure. The next exchange saw him clamp a bodylock and lift Ogawa into the air with a monstrous belly-to-belly suplex, the impact knocking the air from the young Judoka and forcing his first knockdown at the seven-minute mark. Karelin grabbed the lead at 1-0 on points. Ogawa beat the ten-count quickly, but seemed a bit shaken.
From that point, the contest took on a more suffocating tenor. Karelin forced Ogawa into increasingly desperate throws while refusing to yield an inch. Ogawa managed another flash moment when he ducked under and snapped Karelin over with a hip throw, but the Soviet rolled instantly through the landing, avoiding a potential knockdown, and snarling into a clinch that shut down Ogawa’s momentum. Karelin’s methodical progression became more pronounced. The Soviet wrestler threw heavy palms to the chest, short body punches, and then a relentless series of tie-ups that drained Ogawa’s energy. Another suplex, this time a crushing side suplex, earned Karelin a second knockdown on the young Japanese prodigy, who staggered up at nine with his gi disheveled. By the twelve-minute mark, Ogawa’s explosiveness had faded, and Karelin seized his moment. Snatching a gutwrench from the mat, he executed his signature Karelin Lift, hoisting Ogawa violently before slamming him headfirst into the canvas. The Brazilian fans gasped. Ogawa barely survived the referee’s next count, and Karelin immediately pounced with suffocating top control. Using his background in SAMBO, he locked in a brutal head-and-arm choke, his vice-like frame crushing down until Ogawa’s struggles slowed. Ogawa submitted after the pressure became too much. The Brazilian fans certainly got what they anticipated with Karelin, but they also gained an appreciation for Ogawa and his courage against the Soviet Olympian. Karelin once again proved the aura of invincibility that surrounded him was very real. Karelin defeats Ogawa via submission (head-and-arm choke), 13:06
After the match, Karelin is honored by the Brazilian amateur wrestling delegation and poses for pictures in the ring.
Nobuhiko Takada vs Kazuo Yamazaki
The energy inside the building remained steady, and the opponents in the next match would not disappoint. Both Takada and Yamazaki would have something to prove tonight in front of the Brazilian fans. Yamazaki began the match on the front foot, circling and firing off sharp, low kicks meant to sting Takada’s legs and force him into movement. Takada answered in kind, his kicks landing with deeper thuds, snapping Yamazaki’s stance back to a more defensive one. The early exchanges were defined by a striking duel as each man sought an opening. Yamazaki seized the first big moment at the five-minute mark, slipping a kick and countering with a lightning palm strike to Takada’s jaw that buckled him to one knee, earning the first knockdown of the match. Takada got back up to his feet without much issue. The Brazilian crowd responded positively, sensing the upset potential. Takada immediately slowed the pace, shifting the fight toward grappling engagements where his methodical nature could come into play. After an extended mat contest that saw a few rope breaks exchanged, Yamazaki got back on his feet and lunged with another kick. Takada caught the leg and took him down, working deliberately into half guard. Yamazaki threatened with a juji-gatame attempt, but Takada’s defense was tight, keeping his arms close as he pried free and pressed his weight down. With the score tied at 1-1 now, this rhythm held for several minutes. Takada gradually imposed himself with positional control, but Yamazaki’s quickness on the mat meant no prolonged dominance. The two wrestlers eventually saw a score tied at 2-2 after another exchange of rope breaks.
The contest turned heavier in the final stretch, with Takada and Yamazaki exchanging more hard strikes as the flow of the contest shifted to a striking-based affair. At around the eleven-minute mark, Yamazaki struck with a sharp high kick that snapped Takada’s head back. The crowd was a bit shocked as the UWF superstar staggered into the ropes. Yamazaki pounced, peppering him with palm strikes and shooting for a double-leg, but Takada sprawled expertly. Takada shifted the weight onto his opponent before countering with a vicious knee strike to the body. The impact folded Yamazaki, earning a knockdown that gave Takada a 3-2 lead on points. Yamazaki had to take his time to catch his breath again, but beat the count by eight. Now emboldened, Takada became more deliberate in cutting off space, walking Yamazaki down with his heavy low kicks and forcing him into reactive strikes. Another exchange of palm thrusts ended with Takada slipping inside, locking a clinch, and hurling Yamazaki to the mat with a tight suplex. From there, Takada showcased his effective catch wrestling skills, inching into side control, isolating an arm, and fighting through Yamazaki’s resistance. Takada cinched in a double wristlock, applying steady torque until Yamazaki was unable to resist. With nowhere to go and his arm extended dangerously, Yamazaki tapped, giving Takada the hard-earned submission. The Brazilian crowd applauded the effort from both men, and they seemed to be quite enthralled with Takada’s undeniable ring presence. Takada defeats Yamazaki via submission (double wristlock), 15:34
Atsushi Onita vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara
For the Brazilian crowd, the next bout had intrigue. Onita had trained in the country years earlier and had made a name for himself as an undercarder on the Vale Tudo circuit. Meanwhile, Fujiwara represented the respected tradition of catch wrestling, which had influenced Luta Livre. The opening few minutes highlighted the difference in styles. Onita pressed aggressively, whipping palm strikes at Fujiwara’s guard and hacking kicks into his ribs, trying to force a firefight from the outset. Fujiwara was stone-faced and unhurried, catching one of Onita’s kicks and tripping him into half guard. From there, Fujiwara methodically worked to trap an arm. Onita had solid counterwork and worked to defend, slapping at Fujiwara’s body and twisting into a scramble until he reached the ropes. With both men near the bottom rope, the referee ruled it a clean break. Onita sprang back up to press forward again. Fujiwara answered with short body punches in the clinch and a sudden headbutt that staggered Onita, dropping him to one knee for the first knockdown at just under six minutes. The count reached five before Onita rose, grinning through the haze and gesturing defiantly at Fujiwara. The veteran stayed calm and seemed almost amused, but Onita’s determination began to make the fight messier. He charged in with palm flurries, backed Fujiwara into the corner, and hammered away until the referee pulled them apart, much to the chagrin of the crowd. Another exchange saw Onita lift Fujiwara and slam him with a rough belly-to-belly throw, a moment that drew a surprised roar from the crowd as Fujiwara rolled to the ropes to steady himself. Fujiwara got back on his feet quickly to avoid initiating a ten-count from the referee. Fujiwara remained in the lead on points at 1-0.
As the contest entered its tenth minute, Fujiwara sought to slow the pace, especially on the mat, while Onita worked to draw Fujiwara into a more chaotic match. Onita attempted to bait Fujiwara into scrambles with his relentless forward pressure. Fujiwara nearly closed the match when he countered a desperate Onita palm strike flurry with a takedown into the Fujiwara armbar, wrenching back on the limb as the audience gasped. Onita barely managed to inch to the ropes. It became clear that Fujiwara had the advantage on the mat and seemed to have Onita’s number whenever the two found themselves in a grappling exchange. Eventually, Fujiwara built up a 2-0 lead through another rope break from Onita during a heel hook attempt. Onita’s urgency heightened. At the fourteen-minute mark, he turned the tide explosively. He caught Fujiwara low with a thudding body kick, then charged in with a flying palm strike that knocked the veteran flat to the mat for the first knockdown in Onita’s favor. Fujiwara rose at six. However, Onita was already on him, diving into a guillotine choke as they tumbled to the mat. He cinched the choke deep, wrapping his legs tight around Fujiwara’s midsection, wrenching upward until the veteran, caught with no route to the ropes, tapped. The Brazilian crowd erupted, recognizing the importance of Onita’s victory. The young sensation trained in Brazil a win secured a big win against one of Japan’s most revered technicians. Fujiwara bowed slightly to acknowledge Onita’s heart and grit. Onita defeats Fujiwara via submission (guillotine choke), 14:49
Onita continues to celebrate his win and calls for a microphone....he says the Gracies can storm all the dojos and buildings they want, but they can never lead a movement like this. That comment earns a huge pop from the crowd.
Akira Maeda vs Dick Vrij
Maeda, dressed in his familiar black trunks, cut a stoic figure; his reputation as the UWF’s ace was well-advertised in Brazil, and the fans received him warmly. Vrij, by contrast, looked loose and confident, aware that his striking could trouble anyone if he kept the fight on the feet. He was more of an unknown quantity for the Brazil fans, but his muscular build and wild, colored hair made him look like a bit of a character. The opening exchanges were based around both wrestlers attempting to exert their rhythm. Vrij opened with a stinging middle kick that drew a sharp slap from Maeda’s midsection, but Maeda returned fire with a crushing low kick that made the crowd wince. Vrij kept his hands high and answered with hard palm strikes, one catching Maeda clean and forcing him back a step. A clinch soon followed, where Vrij used his Muay Thai skills to dig in a pair of knees before Maeda muscled him into the ropes. After a bit of a stalemate, the referee forced a reset. The flow of the fight became clear as Vrij tried to catch Maeda with strikes. Maeda had a good defensive stance and looked for his chance to drag things to the mat or hammer away with his own powerful kicks. The first knockdown came at six minutes when Maeda ducked under a Vrij palm strike and countered with a brutal roundhouse to the body, folding the Dutchman briefly before he rose at a count of six.
The knockdown did little to temper Vrij’s offense. He came forward harder, ripping palm strikes to Maeda’s guard and sneaking in a clean knee from the clinch that staggered Maeda. Maeda managed to stay on his feet and grappled with Vrij in an attempt to slow his opponent down. Vrij held his ground and attempted to create some distance with his knees, but Maeda blocked and caught him for a side suplex, planting Vrij squarely in the center of the mat. Vrij scrambled and had trouble finding his feet as the referee initiated another ten-count. Vrij managed to beat the count quickly again, but he did seem a bit shellshocked. As Vrij continued to hunt for a killer blow on Maeda, Maeda was able to wrestle Vrij down to the mat several times, and each time, Vrij was quick to use a rope break if needed to cut any grappling exchange short. By the ten-minute mark, Vrij had already given up three points. Still, his striking remained dangerous. A violent high kick late in the sequence caught Maeda on the shoulder and glanced off his jaw, nearly flooring him. The crowd stirred, sensing that Vrij had forced Maeda on the back foot. Maeda attempted to defend, but another striking combo from Vrij managed to knock him off his feet to give Vrij his first point of the match. Maeda got back up quickly, but Vrij now had some momentum.
The finishing stretch did not disappoint the fans in the audience, as the two pushed each other to the limit. The two engaged in another extended striking exchange, with neither giving ground. Vrij managed to stay on his feet despite some sharp high kicks from Maeda, and Maeda ate some punishment as well after Vrij delivered a series of sharp knee strikes from a clinch. At the twelve-minute mark, Maeda again cornered Vrij, eating a few palm strikes to close the distance before unleashing a German suplex that landed Vrij hard on his back. The referee’s count reached seven before Vrij rose, now visibly weary as he knew he was down to his last point. Maeda wasted no time, blasting him with a left body kick that opened him up for a clinch from Maeda. Vrij tried to stand his ground bravely. Maeda stepped in and hooked Vrij’s leg before launching him through the air with a Capture Suplex. Vrij landed hard on his back again and was too slow to get up as the referee called for another knockdown and the final bell, awarding Maeda the TKO victory as Vrij’s five points were exhausted. The Brazilian crowd made their appreciation known for the contrast of styles and Maeda’s convincing victory. Maeda defeats Vrij via TKO, 15:02
Before the main event, Lou Thesz, Billy Robinson, and Karl Gotch are all welcomed into the ring by Brazilian dignitaries. They are given separate awards, and Lou Thesz formally presents the Undisputed World Heavyweight Championship belt before the audience. Lou Thesz also gives a brief speech that is translated. He praises Satoru Sayama for choosing to defend the belt on foreign soil, and that Marco Ruas was a worthy opponent with an incredible pedigree. "May the best man win!"
Satoru Sayama vs Marco Ruas
After the pre-match ceremonies, both wrestlers made their entrances. Marco Ruas was met with a thunderous ovation as he marched to the ring in his black Vale Tudo trunks, absent anything else, including kickpads. Satoru Sayama entered the arena in black long tights trimmed with gold. Sayama, despite his status as champion, remained a bit of a mystery to the Brazilian fans, but they were informed about his reputation as one of the most accomplished wrestlers on the UWF roster and someone who had legitimate combat skills. Masami Soranaka presented the belt one final time in front of the audience, as Nobuyuki Furuta made the ring introductions. Both competitors were checked before the bell sounded, and the anticipation was palpable. The Ginásio Gilberto Cardoso was charged with energy; the fans were eager to see their countryman take on the reigning champion. The bell finally sounded, and the main event was underway. The opening minutes saw both fighters testing each other’s range. The crowd was buzzing at every strike thrown. Sayama worked behind his speed, cutting angles and tagging Ruas with quick low kicks and palm strikes. Ruas checked a kick and returned fire with a heavy low kick that made Sayama wince, and then followed him toward the ropes. Both men continued at a similar pace, and neither seemed interested in showing any signs of weakness. At the five-minute mark, Ruas closed the distance, forcing Sayama into a clinch where he ripped a knee to the body and executed a sharp hip throw into side control. Sayama, unwilling to give up position, twisted and slid toward the ropes, grabbing them to force the break. Back on his feet, Sayama adjusted. The champion answered back with a crisp middle kick followed by a palm strike combination that briefly stunned Ruas and set the tone that he could not be bullied outright.
Sayama continued to remain clinical. He stayed light on his feet and used sudden flurries to keep Ruas from walking him down. At nine minutes, he caught Ruas stepping forward and drilled a head-level roundhouse kick that dropped the Brazilian to the mat, forcing the referee to administer the ten count. The sudden blast rocked the jam-packed arena, and the fans were immediately urging Ruas to get back up. Ruas, grimacing but defiant, rose back up at six. The champion pressed his advantage with rapid kicks to the thigh and midsection, but when he attempted to follow with another spinning kick, Ruas absorbed it and countered with a body lock, dragging Sayama to the ground. From half guard, Ruas worked deliberately to isolate Sayama’s leg, forcing the champion to stretch desperately for the ropes to avoid a kneebar. The crowd roared as the referee waved it off as a rope escape; the score was now tied 1-1 on points. Ruas enjoyed a good stretch of momentum afterward, as he was able to keep close to Sayama and prevent the champion from unleashing his powerful strikes. Ruas snagged a double-leg takedown and the two engaged in an extended contest on the mat. After a few more minutes of impressive grappling, Ruas secured a third and eventually fourth rope break from Sayama after he threatened him twice with another series of submission attempts. Ruas was now leading 2-1 on points.
The middle of the bout saw Sayama enjoy more success as he tagged Ruas a bit more with kicks. Sayama relied on clever feints to throw Ruas off his defensive stance. At fourteen minutes, Sayama landed another sharp high kick, knocking Ruas off balance and forcing the referee’s second knockdown count against the Brazilian, tying the match at 2–2. Ruas was quick to get up again, but the crowd seemed to sense that Ruas felt he was in trouble. The champion followed with a flurry of palm strikes, but Ruas weathered the storm and turned the tide again with the backing of the fans. Ruas caught Sayama with a brutal inside low kick that buckled him. Sayama dropped to the mat, holding his thigh. Soranaka initiated the ten count, but Sayama got up, signaling to Soranaka that he was ready to go again. Ruas recognized that he was now leading 3-2 on points. The fans realized it as well, and they erupted, sensing Sayama’s movement was slowing. But the champion’s composure held. He retained his ability to change levels unexpectedly, slipping under a Ruas palm strike to drive through to attempt a German suplex, but Ruas defended well and shrugged off the attempt. Sayama tagged Ruas a few more times with sharp low kicks in an attempt to slowly weaken the formidable Brazilian. It seemed like Sayama recognized this was becoming a war of attrition.
The final ten minutes saw both men dig deep. Sayama’s legs received a fair share of punishment from Ruas’ low kicks, and he seemed to be slowing down a bit more. Ruas stayed calculated, picking his moments to unleash more heavy body kicks and looking to clinch whenever Sayama’s back neared the ropes. The two found themselves on the mat again, but neither found an advantage as Sayama nullified Ruas on the canvas and prevented him from establishing top control. Ruas seemed flustered by Sayama’s grappling counterwork at times. At twenty-five minutes, Ruas finally forced Sayama into another dangerous scramble, nearly sinking in a heel hook before the champion barely rolled through and got free without touching the ropes. The crowd gasped at the narrow escape. Back on his feet, Sayama responded in kind with one of his best sequences of the night. After feinting low and landing a flush palm strike to Ruas’s jaw, Sayama slipped around him for a well-executed Tiger Suplex that sent Ruas crashing hard onto his shoulders. Ruas was stunned, and so was the crowd. The Luta Livre icon was slow to get up as Soranaka administered a count. Ruas finally found his feet at the count of eight. Both men were tied 3-3 on points.
The final stretch played out with pure determination as the time limit neared. Ruas charged in, throwing a last desperate clinch knee that Sayama blocked with his forearm, while the champion answered with sharp counters to keep space. At twenty-nine minutes, Sayama slipped another body kick and fired a spinning back kick that drove Ruas into the ropes. Ruas stumbled but maintained his footing, perhaps due to the energy the fans were giving him. The two circled with exhaustion in the closing seconds, trading one last set of palm strikes before the bell rang at thirty minutes. With the score tied at 3-3, the judges were called upon. After what seemed like an eternity for the fans, the decision was announced for Sayama. The Brazilian fans, as expected, were livid. A good number of jeers could be heard as Furuta made the announcement. Those closest to the arena were on their feet and calling for extra time. Sayama defeats Ruas via judges’ decision, 30:00
Marco Ruas is quick to call for a microphone, and he attempts to calm the fans down by saying he believed it was a fair fight and that the judges arrived at their decision objectively. He raises Sayama's hand in the process, and this seems to help a bit, although there is still a bit of tension in the air. Marco Ruas shakes Sayama's hand, and they both bow to each other, drawing some applause from the fans as things seem a bit calmer eventually. Ruas gets on the microphone again and thanks the fans for attending, saying that he believes the UWF philosophy is an honorable one, and one that will show the world what real wrestling looks like. Sayama and Ruas embrace again as the UWF theme plays in the arena. Ruas steps aside as he lets Sayama have his moment to celebrate.
The commentators recap the events of the evening and promote the first round of the UWF U-COSMOS Grand Prix, which will be held later this month, on August 26th, in Sapporo! Sayama is shown being interviewed backstage, giving his thoughts on the match. Ruas gives some brief remarks as well and says the Brazilian fans are passionate, but they understand the result. Some other wrestlers are shown being interviewed, including Maeda. The rolling credits for WOWOW's broadcast hit, and another successful international event for UWF is in the books.