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General Data
Current gimmick:
Atsushi Onita
Age:
68 years
Promotion:
Freelancer
Active Roles:
Singles Wrestler, Tag Team Wrestler, Promoter

Personal Data
Birthday:
25.10.1957
Birthplace:
Nagasaki, Japan
Gender:
male
Height:
5' 11" (181 cm)
Weight:
169 lbs (77 kg)
Background in sports:
Baseball

Career Data
Alter egos:
Atsushi Onita
    a.k.a.  Great Nita
    a.k.a.  Mr. Onita
Roles:
Singles Wrestler (1974 - 1984, 1988 - today)
Tag Team Wrestler (1974 - 1984, 1990 - today)
Promoter (1989 - today)
Trainer (1989 - 2013)
Beginning of in-ring career:
14.04.1974
In-ring experience:
51 years
Wrestling style:
Hardcore, Death Match
Nicknames:
"Mr. Liar"
"Padre del Deathmatch"
Signature moves:
DDT/DDO (Dangerous Driver Onita)
Diving Headbutt
Thunder Fire Bomb

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8.84
Current Total Rating (?)
Valid votes: 125
Number of comments: 32
10.0 57x
9.0 30x
8.0 17x
7.0 15x
6.0 3x
5.0 1x
4.0 0x
3.0 0x
2.0 2x
1.0 0x
0.0 0x
Average rating: 8.86  [125]
Average rating in 2026: 10.00  [2]
Average rating in 2025: 9.14  [14]
Average rating in 2024: 8.82  [11]
Average rating in 2023: 8.85  [20]
Average rating in 2022: 8.22  [9]
Average rating in 2021: 9.05  [19]
Average rating in 2020: 9.00  [10]
Average rating in 2019: 8.75  [4]
Average rating in 2018: 8.80  [5]
Average rating in 2017: 8.75  [4]
Average rating in 2016: 9.20  [5]
Average rating in 2015: 9.20  [5]
Average rating in 2014: 9.40  [5]
Average rating in 2013: 9.33  [3]
Average rating in 2011: 7.50  [2]
Average rating in 2009: 2.00  [1]
Average rating in 2008: 8.67  [6]
Your Options:
Other:
Eliasisallecw wrote on 04.12.2025:
[10.0] "My all time favorite wrestler. Everyone should know about him (mox used his wild thing theme please bring it back) this guy did crazy shit for the love of the game, PEAK"
MrRaider959 wrote on 12.05.2025:
[10.0] "A deathmatch legend and the founder of FMW in Japan. He had some must-watch deathmatches like the exploding cage match and multiple exploding barbed wire matches."
OwenEdwards wrote on 23.02.2025:
[7.0] "Strictly for his Juniors work, where he was just hitting his stride when a horrendous injury closed that avenue."
Zak22 wrote on 07.10.2024:
[8.0] "The true king of hardcore, Onita was a revolutionary, he looked at the traditional and clean Japanese wrestling scene and said, nah lets do something different, he looked at violent American wrestling and said, yes but 10x more. Onita also booked women very well in one of Japan's few mixed promotions. Onita understood that spectacle and emotion can do so much for wrestling. In the ring, Onita used his mastery of psychology to be a compelling star."
H884 wrote on 01.09.2024:
[9.0] "Maybe the craziest man to ever make in Professional Wrestling and that is something. Onita is a innovator with the deathmatch style basing it around his excursion in Memphis and using such influence to continue his career up till now, Onita will probably never be duplicated and it's hard to imagine what Hardcore Wrestling would look like if Onita didn't suffer the knee injury in All Japan because he was also a good Junior Heavyweight though he will prehaps always be overshadowed by close friend Masanobu Fuchi's run as the top native junior worker under Baba. Also lastly as I hinted at the start, Onita's insanity is a benefit to crazy spectacles that hadn't been seen before like the Goto matches as well as those with Aoyagi and that iconic match with Terry Funk in 1993. In short, Onita is a god-damn legend who has given some of the craziest moments in pro wrestling."
TheOneAndOnlyCactus wrote on 05.10.2023:
[8.0] "As much as I dont like death match wrestling, I must admit that Onita made it popular for a reason. No he wasnt particularly good after his knee injury, but he was such a charismatic figure that you couldnt look away while he performed. He was ideal for death match wrestling as its not about workrate, its about how much youre willing to take and how you can get the crowd invested in the pain you are inflicting and giving. And in that sense, Onita was good at what he did. His absolutely horrid backstage behavior doesnt deter from how well he played his role. Im amazed he still is wrestling today. Hell he is wrestling now more than he did in his past 5 years, and most of his matches are hardcore or deathmatches. Yes theyre tag matches, but how can he still go like that and endure punishment after everything he took before? And while those matches are not the best of his career, he is playing his part to make them entertaining. Thats dedication."
KKeanel wrote on 01.10.2023:
[10.0] "He was a great contender to be legend of puroresu since day one, but until 80s from other perspective. His gruesome injury fortunately opened the doors of hardcore, which provided him national fame and respect in whole wrestling industry. Without FMW would be no ECW, so this side of careers of Funk, Foley etc. would be underestimate. Incredibly charimatic figure, even with some controversies he deserves an eternal respect from wrestling fans."
Vanstyler wrote on 21.08.2023:
[6.0] "Japan's Foley but crazier. A great figure of extreme wrestling, but it's hard for me to tolerate his lack of respect for the health of other wrestlers, exposing them to ridiculous situations. His bookings are made so that only he wins the main events in matches with explosives. He is a great figure but he should retire and leave his place to the new generations."
tmxicon wrote on 08.05.2023:
[6.0] "A man who's charisma is both his best asset and biggest liability. I don't mind his FMW output since there is a lot more psychology in his deathmatches than you'll find with those who came after him. That said, there isn't much he ever did that excites me a whole bunch either."
jasvvy wrote on 10.04.2023:
[10.0] "One of the most charismatic wrestlers of all time. Easily able to switch from being the sympathetic babyface to despised, trash-pelted heel, in a heartbeat. Not the most able in-ring competitor, but he never needed to be. Punch, bleed, explode, smoke, throw water, MONEY."
munrapido3 wrote on 04.04.2023:
[5.0] "If i only looked at how iconic and charismatic he was, i would've gave him a perfect 10 but i think a 5 would be good for him. He did start as a promising junior heavyweight for AJPW and was positioned to be AJPW's ace for their admittedly inferior junior division until a freak accident when he injured his knee stopped that from happening. Since then, he was pretty limited in-ring. Additionally, he is a HUGE carny and is an egotistical prick who isnt keen of putting younger talent over and treated his employees crap while lived so lavishly from the millions of yen he got from FMW's large gates during FMW's heyday."
Cyclopz007 wrote on 31.03.2023:
[10.0] "Always played as him in WCW vs the World on PS1. Many years later find out what a living legend he is lol! Favourite hardcore wrestler all time!"
Leth99 wrote on 22.12.2022:
[2.0] "He created FMW out of spite that his All Japan career did not turn out the way he expected it to, and he felt he deserved to be on the level of Baba and Inoki. Once he got there he stepped on a lot of people along the way and basically destroyed what he created. I have to give credit that he was a draw, but he's not for me, especially that hardcore style. Two points because he came back after his '84 run and because he was an innovator of today's wrestling"
DrPerryCox wrote on 02.08.2022:
"Absolutely adore this man. More passion and fire than almost everyone in the game. Had his share of negatives, sure but overall a pioneer of deathmatch wrestling."
juiceisloose wrote on 18.08.2021:
[8.0] "Onita started out as an ordinary wrestler in AJPW and turned into one of the most iconic hardcore wrestler/promoter ever. Even though he might lack some things as far as his wrestling skills, he was a natural born heel and had tons of swagger, generated immense heat. One hell of a promoter, drew huge crowds when he was in FMW. Is a great example of the notion that wrestlers are batshit crazy. I mean, him becoming a politican from being a hardcore wrestler, the sex scandal, having deep connections with the yakuza etc. this guy has had one hell of a life and can still go. With all these good things being said, Onita was very egoistical and constantly tried to get himself over every chance he got. I heard he disliked Hayabusa for becoming big and the two of em didn't really like each other. Even went as far as to bring the guy who killed Bruiser Brody to stab him and planned to make a storyline in which he was going to give this guy a lesson for killing Brody and would consequently become a hero for that. Also, he recently started a new promotion called FMW-E but i honestly wish he hadn't cuz i wanna remember him from his old days."
Strong Zero Machine wrote on 08.06.2021:
[10.0] "So Cool, Charismatic, a big big draw, great booker etc. Onita is a pioneer and a legend of deathmatch wrestling! Over 45 years of career and style working! Create FMW on of the hottest promotions in japan during 90s and a huge inspiration for ECW (with a partnership), BJW etc. Definitely Onita deserve a 10!"
CoolKyle wrote on 19.05.2021:
[9.0] "Onita was the epitome of cool, and evidently a heavy influence for Moxley. He was a deathmatch legend, not known for his technical prowess. What he lacked in technical ability, he made up for in the charisma and coolness department. A knee injury turned him from a traditional lightweight wrestler into the king of death match wrestling. Onita out of the ring is almost a good as he was in it in terms of being entertaining/nutty. He wasn't the first wrestler elected to public office in Japan but he went out in a style befitting his reputation. The heat Onita got for being a gimmicky, backyard, deathmatch wrestler was unreal. The guy who represented what wrestling wasn't supposed to be in Japan. The equivalent of having Necro Butcher come out with a staple gun to wrestle Sammartino in the '70s."
Ma Stump Puller wrote on 20.10.2020:
[7.0] "Starting off as a relatively hot property as a top junior in AJPW (through he admittedly wasn't really a fantastic wrestler, he could work pretty well above average) but was completely thrown off course when knee injuries took him off the shelf for a while and forced him to completely modify the way he wrestled. A time like this for a wrestler for changing their whole way of wrestling can cause a downturn in quality (see Austin, Chono, etc) but having also retired for six years on top of that meant that Onita had a big hill to climb, and well, he did more than just that by reinventing himself as a hardcore wrestler and making FMW one of the top companies in Japan with his drawing power and solid babyface work against brutal opponents. Never was the performer he was pre injury but he made up for that with brutality and completely chaotic matches. Yeah he's not a technical master nor was he a stiff striker, but what he did have was above all other traits needed for a wrestler: the ability to sell tickets. Definitely a hardcore icon and has influenced (even if they don't know it) dozens of companies and untold amounts of wrestlers with his antics and focus on character work over workrate."
ElPolloLoco wrote on 13.09.2019:
[7.0] "An absolutely amazing draw, the kind that could sell off large arenas on his name alone and the chief reason why FMW was such a huge hit in the days and went in such rapid decline when Onita left. However like so many amazing draws he was nothing to write home about in the ring and once removed from AJPW he got rapidly worse through injuries, tear and wear. Onita was smart enough to acknowledge this and completely embraced the hardcore style to mask this decline, even if with hindsight it's easy to say the amount of blood in most of his "classic" matches was almost cartoonish and surely excessive for what was going on inside and outside the ring."
JEK 1991 wrote on 17.01.2019:
[9.0] "Pioneer for hardcore wrestling and blood. Don't remember if you he did not bleed in any matches. Very ultra violet."
RatingsMachine wrote on 04.11.2018:
[9.0] "The high rating is down to the fact that Onita was an incredible draw, something that he doesn't always get recognition for because it wasn't for one of the 'major' promotions. Onita was never the best of workers, but his unique charisma and charm meant that he was major box office and single handedly carried FMW. The promotion's popularity took a major dive once he retired, and even though he was always going to come back, when he did, it didn't revitalize the promotion because he was seen to have broken his word."