Samoa Joe: Difference between revisions
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** ''[[Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic]]'' (2015) – with [[Finn Bálor]]<ref name=NXTRespect/> |
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Revision as of 23:33, 25 September 2016
Samoa Joe | |
---|---|
Birth name | Nuufolau Joel Seanoa[1] |
Born | [2] Orange County, California, U.S.[3] | March 17, 1979
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | King Joe[3] Samoa Joe[2] |
Billed height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[4][5] |
Billed weight | 282 lb (128 kg)[4] |
Billed from | Huntington Beach, California[4] The Isle of Samoa |
Trained by | Cincinnati Red[2] Johnny Hemp[2] |
Debut | 1999[2] |
Nuufolau Joel "Joe" Seanoa[1] (born March 17, 1979),[3] better known by his ring name Samoa Joe, is an American professional wrestler, currently signed to WWE and performing in its developmental territory, NXT, where he is a former NXT Champion. He was previously best known for his time with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) and Ring of Honor (ROH).
Joe established himself in ROH from the promotion's beginning in 2002, holding the ROH World Championship for a record 21 months from May 2003 to December 2004. Upon joining TNA in June 2005, he embarked on an 18-month-long undefeated streak, and went on to hold the TNA World Heavyweight Championship once, the TNA X Division Championship five times, the TNA World Tag Team Championship twice, and the TNA Television Championship once; completing the TNA Triple Crown and the TNA Grand Slam.
He also wrestled internationally and on the independent circuit for various promotions, winning several titles, including the GHC Tag Team Championship with Magnus in Pro Wrestling Noah, an he was an inaugural NWA Intercontinental Tag Team Champion with Keiji Sakoda in Pro Wrestling Zero1. He left TNA in February 2015, briefly competing again in ROH and the independent circuit. He officially debuted in WWE's developmental territory NXT, in May that year, and signed a full-time contract with the company in June.
Early life
Seanoa was born and raised in Orange County, California. He resided mainly in Huntington Beach and spent time during his childhood in Ewa Beach, Hawaii. Seanoa's family founded a Polynesian dance troupe in the United States called Tiare Productions. Seanoa made his stage debut at the 1984 Summer Olympics opening at the age of five. He became a California State Junior Judo Champion and was an all league football player while attending Ocean View High School.[6] Before becoming a wrestler, Seanoa worked as a mortgage broker.[7]
Professional wrestling career
Joe was the first graduate of the UIWA West Coast Dojo, training under Cincinnati Red, along with Johnny Hemp and, occasionally, John Delayo. He debuted in December 1999 in a match against "Uncle" Jess Hansen just three months after beginning training.
Ultimate Pro Wrestling (2000–2001)
Joe quickly signed with former WWF developmental affiliate Ultimate Pro Wrestling (UPW), where he feuded with John Cena and made an appearance on WWF Jakked against Essa Rios.[8] He tagged with Mike Knox at UPW Proving Ground on December 12, 2000 in the Galaxy Theatre of Santa Ana, California and defeated the debuting Al Katrazz with Basil. He eventually captured the UPW Heavyweight Championship.[9] He later became the longest reigning UPW Heavyweight Champion ever. When Joe was in UPW, he met Bruce Pritchard and Jim Ross, who told him that he will not have a future in pro wrestling.[10]
Pro Wrestling Zero-One (2001–2002)
In June 2001, Joe made his way to Japan, wrestling for Shinya Hashimoto's Pro Wrestling Zero-One promotion, fighting in its Shingeki series of pay-per-views,[11] as well as the annual Burning Heart tournaments.[12]
Joe continued to work for the promotion throughout 2002, participating in a number of their biggest shows and tournaments. After forming a team with Keiji Sakoda, they became the inaugural NWA Intercontinental Tag Team Champions, though their reign is no longer officially recognized by the promotion.[13][14] He worked as both Samoa Joe and later King Joe, but ultimately chose to leave the promotion when he was asked to take on a more gimmicky character.
Ring of Honor (2002–2007, 2008)
Back in the United States, Joe joined the ranks of the East Coast-based Ring of Honor (ROH) promotion in 2002. He made his debut at "Glory by Honor" as Christopher Daniels's "hired assassin", brought in to take out Daniels's chief enemy, Low Ki.[15] Originally booked for just the one match against Low Ki, Joe impressed fans with his extremely stiff and hard-hitting style that resembled a mixed martial arts fighter more than a wrestler, which led to ROH booking him full-time.[16]
Joe quickly rose through the ranks and became ROH Champion, defeating Xavier for the belt, which soon became the ROH World Championship on May 17, 2003 after defeating The Zebra Kid at "Frontiers of Honor" in London, England.[17][18] He held that title for twenty one months before losing it to Austin Aries at "Final Battle 2004" on December 26, 2004.[18] During this time, he had a trilogy of title defenses against CM Punk (the second match earning a 5 star rating from Dave Meltzer's Wrestling Observer Newsletter, the first American match in seven years to do so).[15] Soon after losing the ROH World Championship to Austin Aries, Joe became the promotion's fifth Pure Champion, defeating his on-screen protégé Jay Lethal for the belt on May 7, 2005 at "Manhattan Mayhem" in New York City.[19][20] He held the title for over three months before losing it to Nigel McGuinness on August 27 at "Dragon Gate Invasion".[19][20]
In October 2005, when Japanese heavyweight superstar Kenta Kobashi made a "once-in-a-lifetime" trip to the United States, he was signed to two Ring of Honor shows. ROH officials selected Joe to face him in a singles match on the first night and a tag match on the second.[15][21] Joe proved to be a formidable opponent for Kobashi, in a back and forth match, which Dave Meltzer again gave a five-star rating. The match went on to win the Wrestling Observer Newsletter award for "Match of the Year". In 2006, Joe was one of the principal wrestlers representing Ring of Honor in their war against rival Philadelphia promotion Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW). The war culminated in a five-on-five Cage of Death match at "Death before Dishonor IV". Joe helped ROH dominate in the match, until, after picking up CZW wrestler Chris Hero for one of his finishers, the Muscle Buster, he was attacked by fellow ROH wrestler Bryan Danielson. Danielson repeatedly hit his injured knee with a steel chair, forcing him to quit the match. Joe was later replaced in the match by Homicide, who went on to win the match for ROH.[22] Joe later teamed with Homicide to fight against the Briscoes, and, like Homicide, found himself back in the ROH world title hunt. Joe, however, came up short against champion Bryan Danielson in several matches, including a match that went to a 60 Minute Draw and the final one being a cage match on December 8.[15] At the December 9 show, Joe called out the Pro Wrestling Noah promotion, claiming "Ring of Honor is right here!" This was not his first encounter with NOAH; at the September 16, 2006 ROH show, after a speech by wrestling legend Bruno Sammartino, Joe got into an argument and pull-apart brawl with Noah star Takeshi Morishima. Subsequently a match was signed for February pitting Joe against Morishima which Joe won.[15]
On January 31, Joe announced that he would no longer be a full-time performer in ROH after March 4.[23] All shows that led up to that date would be billed as the "Samoa Joe Farewell Tour". On March 4, he beat longtime rival Homicide in his final ROH match with a Muscle Buster from the second rope.[15] On November 22, 2008, Joe made a one night only return for Rising Above, defeating Tyler Black in a non-pay-per-view main event.[24]
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
Undefeated streak (2005–2006)
On June 14, 2005, it was announced that Joe had signed a contract with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA).[25] He made his official debut five days later at the Slammiversary pay-per-view, defeating Sonjay Dutt in a match that saw him dubbed "The Samoan Submission Machine" by announcer Mike Tenay.[26] Joe was a participant in the Christopher Daniels Invitational Super X Cup, defeating Sonjay Dutt and Alex Shelley to advance to the tournament finals at Sacrifice. Joe won the tournament by defeating A.J. Styles, but only with help from Daniels.[27] As a result of Daniels' interference, however, TNA Director of Authority Larry Zbyszko made Daniels defend his X Division Championship in a three-way match against both Joe and Styles at TNA Unbreakable. This match marked Joe's first title shot in the company, though Styles was booked to win the match. Joe's undefeated streak was still officially intact, as it was Daniels that had been pinned, not Joe.[28] This match is to date the only match in TNA's history to receive a rating of five stars from Dave Meltzer.[29]
At Genesis on November 13, he teamed with Daniels, Alex Shelley, and Roderick Strong (a team that Daniels called "The Ministry") against Sonjay Dutt, Chris Sabin, Matt Bentley, and Austin Aries in an eight man elimination match. Following the victory by Daniels and Joe (Shelley and Strong were eliminated earlier in the match), Joe attacked Daniels, beating him around the ringside area until he had busted him open. He then threw Daniels into the ring, and delivered a Muscle Buster. Joe then went out to grab a steel chair from ringside and brought it into the ring, after which he gave Daniels a second Muscle Buster, this time onto the chair, supposedly giving Daniels a level-3 concussion.[30] In response to these actions, Styles called Joe out on an episode of Impact!, saying his attack of Daniels violated an unwritten code of respect in the X Division. Prior to Turning Point, Joe attacked Styles, saying he did not respect the X Division code (a vast departure from his Ring of Honor persona, who is a stalwart defender of their written Code of Honor). Joe defeated Styles at Turning Point and won the X Division Championship.[31] Joe could not injure Styles, however, Daniels came out and stopped him.[32] Daniels was later slated to face Joe at Final Resolution in 2006 for the X Division Championship. During the build-up to the match, Joe stated that he intended to end Daniels' career. During the match, Styles came down to the ring to cheer for Daniels. Not long after making Daniels bleed from his head, Joe stopped going for the pin, instead dropping knee after knee on Daniels' head. Styles, concerned about Daniels' health, signaled for the match to be stopped by throwing in the towel, allowing Joe to retain the X Division title.[33] Joe proceeded to win the rematch of the three-way at Unbreakable, thus retaining his title.[34] This three-way feud continued until Destination X, when he lost the title to Daniels in an Ultimate X match, a match in which there is no pinfall or submission, thus keeping his undefeated streak.[31][35]
Joe was then taken out of the X Division and matched with an initially unannounced opponent. On the March 25 edition of Impact!, it was announced that he would take on Sabu at Lockdown. Despite that, he still had a scheduled X Division title match, and, on April 13's Impact! (TNA's Thursday debut), Joe regained the X Division title after delivering an Island Driver from the middle turnbuckle to Christopher Daniels.[31] Joe then successfully defended his X Division title against Sabu at Lockdown.[36] At Sacrifice, Joe partnered with Sting in a tag team match against Jeff Jarrett and Scott Steiner. Joe and Sting were victorious, but after the match, Joe left the ring and allowed Sting to be attacked.[37] Joe explained this by stating that he agreed to only watch Sting's back "from bell to bell" (implying that once the second bell rang, his duties were over), but still had issues with Steiner. Joe added Scott Steiner to his undefeated streak, at Slammiversary.[38]
During the Impact! tapings on May 15, Joe was injured as he performed a kick, and it was reported that he tore every knee ligament except the anterior cruciate ligament. He suffered a first degree tear to the posterior cruciate ligament and a second degree tear to the medial collateral ligament. Joe would remain out of action for two weeks. After returning, Joe lost his X Division Championship in a triple threat match with Sonjay Dutt and Senshi. Senshi pinned Dutt to win the championship after Steiner laid out Joe with a steel chair.[31] Joe would have his chance at revenge when he participated in a four-way number one contender match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship along with Sting, Christian Cage, and Scott Steiner at Victory Road on July 16. Joe lost this match when Sting pinned Steiner.[39]
Joe beat Jeff Jarrett at No Surrender in a "Fan's Revenge Lumberjack match". After the match, he took Jarrett's NWA World Heavyweight Championship with him, telling Jim Cornette that if Jarrett or Sting (Jarrett's scheduled opponent at Bound For Glory) wanted the belt, they could take it from him.[40] On the October 12 episode, Joe agreed to return the belt to the Jarrett-Sting winner under one condition—the winner had to agree to give him a title shot. This offer was turned down, and finally Joe was given the choice of giving back the title or be fired. Kurt Angle made his debut and got into a brawl with Joe after he again refused to give back the belt, and during the brawl, Jarrett took the belt back. At Bound for Glory on October 22, Joe defeated Raven, Brother Runt and Abyss in a Monster's Ball match. The match ended when special referee Jake Roberts performed a DDT to Raven, allowing Joe to deliver the Muscle Buster to Raven for the pinfall. Later in the night, Joe was involved in a pull-apart brawl with Kurt Angle after Jim Cornette announced that he would be fired if he interfered in the main event match that involved Angle as special enforcer.[41] At Genesis, Joe lost to Angle after submitting to Angle's ankle lock. This ended his eighteen-month undefeated streak.[42]
TNA World Heavyweight Champion (2006–2008)
Throughout the rest of 2006 into 2007, Joe continued to feud with Angle picking up a victory by submission in their rematch at Turning Point,[43] before suffering a legit knee injury in a tag team match that pitted Rhino and Kurt Angle against Joe and A.J. Styles. On January 14, 2007 at Final Resolution, Joe faced Angle in a thirty-minute Iron Man match. With seconds remaining, Angle was put in the ankle lock but was saved from submitting another fall by the time expiring. As a result, Angle won the match three falls to two.[44]
On the February 14 edition of Impact!, Joe won a gauntlet match to become the number one contender to Christian Cage's NWA World Heavyweight Championship at Destination X. Joe lost to Cage after Cage reversed the Coquina Clutch into a pinning combination and used the ropes for leverage.[45] On the May 24 edition of Impact!, Joe qualified for the King of the Mountain match at Slammiversary by defeating Sting with a Samoan drop after Christopher Daniels hit Sting with a baseball bat; Joe lost the King of the Mountain match, when Kurt Angle hung the belt. He then qualified to compete in the Match of Champions at Victory Road by defeating Jay Lethal and Chris Sabin for the X Division title on the July 12 episode of Impact!.[31] At the Match of Champions, Joe scored the winning pinfall on Brother Ray after Kurt Angle hit the Angle Slam and won the TNA World Tag Team Championship from Team 3D, making him the first wrestler in TNA to hold multiple TNA championships.[31] He later opted to hold the title by himself.[2] At Hard Justice, Joe put up the X Division title and both Tag Team titles against Kurt Angle's TNA World title as well as the IGF's version of the IWGP World Championship. Joe, however, lost all his titles thanks to interferences by Karen Angle, enabling Kurt to become the second TNA Triple Crown Champion.[2] Joe became the first man to defeat Christian Cage by pinfall or submission in TNA, forcing him to submit to the Coquina Clutch at Bound for Glory, thus ending Cage's twenty-three month undefeated streak by pinfall or submission in TNA.[2]
Joe was then announced as the teammate of Kevin Nash and Scott Hall in their match against the Angle Alliance at Turning Point. Hall, however, no-showed the event. Before the match, Joe was asked to cut a promo alleviating heat from the company and introducing Eric Young as Hall's replacement. Joe went five minutes overtime and ranted against Hall (whom he sarcastically referred to as "The Phantom of the Impact Zone"), Nash and some other superstars, which legitimately upset Nash and TNA President Dixie Carter at ringside. Before calling Young to come to the ring he told the TNA ringside staff, "Are you mad? Go ahead, fire me, I don't care". Joe, Nash and Young defeated the Angle Alliance when Joe pinned Tomko after a Muscle Buster. After the match, Joe and Nash briefly argued and shoved one another backstage, with Joe apologizing at a talent meeting the following day.[46] On-screen, though, Joe continued to direct his frustration towards TNA management, going as far as to trash a Christmas party organized by Matt Morgan. In storyline, after complaining to Jim Cornette that he did not have a match at Final Resolution, Cornette decided to team Joe with Kevin Nash, who was to receive a title shot with Scott Hall when he returned. At Final Resolution, Joe, along with his tag team partner Kevin Nash lost to the team of A.J. Styles and Tomko. This occurred after Nash refused to tag himself into the match leaving Joe to fend for himself.[2] In addition, Nash "flipped off" Joe whilst leaving the ringside area. After Nash had screwed Joe at Final Resolution, a furious Joe stormed to the backstage area on the hunt for Nash, only to find him welding a baseball bat for protection and refusing to fight Joe unless they got paid. Nash explained to Joe that he was teaching him a lesson about the wrestling business and told Joe he could help him to the top if he followed his direction. In good faith, Nash gave Joe the bat and implored to hit him if he was not satisfied with his explanation. Joe was still fuming, but let Nash go without incident. On the January 24 edition of Impact!, Joe went on a rampage, attacking several TNA employees, culminating in his attacking of Jeremy Borash after being announced as the MVP of 2007.
At Against All Odds, Joe served as the special enforcer for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship match where Kurt Angle defended his title against challenger Christian Cage. During the contest, A.J. Styles interfered and Joe fought Styles to the back, but Tomko came out and attacked Cage giving Angle the win.[2] On the February 14 edition of Impact!, Joe formed an alliance with Cage and Kevin Nash, to compete with Kurt Angle's Angle Alliance. It was also announced that Joe would be given the next TNA World Heavyweight Championship opportunity against Angle. Over the next few weeks, Joe and his newfound alliance would attack the Angle Alliance leading up to their match at Destination X. Joe vowed that he would eliminate the Angle Alliance so he would receive a fair title match with Angle at Lockdown. On the March 6 edition of Impact!, Joe, Christian, and Nash faced a member of the Angle Alliance to determine who would get a five-minute advantage during their match at Destination X. Joe lost his First Blood match to Tomko, but Nash defeated Styles in a Street Fight while Cage defeated Angle in a Six Sides of Steel match. Joe's team won the match when he made Tomko submit to the Coquina Clutch.[2] Achieving his goal to eliminate the Angle Alliance, nothing now stood in the way of Joe getting a fair title shot at Lockdown.
At Lockdown, Joe defeated Angle to win his first TNA World Championship and become TNA's third Triple Crown Champion.[31] The stipulation of the match was if Joe had lost, he would have had to retire from professional wrestling.[2] He defeated Angle in a rematch on Impact! and then retained against Scott Steiner and Kaz at Sacrifice.[2] At Slammiversary, Joe became the first champion to ever retain his title in a King of the Mountain match.[47] Joe was then challenged to a match by Booker T at Victory Road, which he accepted. At Victory Road the match went to a No Contest when Sting hit Joe with a baseball bat and Booker pinned him while Sharmell made the three count. At Hard Justice, Joe defeated Booker after a guitar shot, thus reclaiming physical possession of the title belt, which Booker had kept after Victory Road. At Bound for Glory IV, he fought Sting in a losing effort to defend the TNA World Heavyweight Championship, ending his reign at 182 days.
On the October 30 edition of Impact!, Joe and AJ Styles formed a faction of younger wrestlers also featuring Jay Lethal, Consequences Creed, Petey Williams, Eric Young, ODB and The Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin), calling themselves "The Frontline", to oppose The Main Event Mafia of Kurt Angle, Sting, Kevin Nash, Booker T and Scott Steiner. At Turning Point Nash defeated Joe by pinning him with his feet on the ropes following a steel chair shot, a low blow and after ramming Joe's head to an exposed turnbuckle. At Final Resolution, The Front Line lost to The Main Event Mafia in a 4-on-4 tag match and Styles failed to win the TNA World Heavyweight Championship.[48] On the December 18 edition of Impact!, Joe and Styles defeated Sting and Nash in a Six Sides of Steel match. Following the match, Joe was attacked by the members of the Main Event Mafia and suffered injuries which would sideline him for the rest of the year.[49]
The Main Event Mafia (2009)
On the January 29 episode of Impact!, a short video was shown in which Joe, sporting a new buzzcut hairstyle, tribal facepaint, and much heavier frame stated he would like to introduce the Main Event Mafia to both the "real" Joe and his "nation of violence".[50] At Destination X, Joe got himself disqualified in his return match against his old rival and Main Event Mafia member Scott Steiner.[2] That same week on Impact!, Joe once again got disqualified this time in a match with Sheik Abdul Bashir. He took him backstage, hung him upside down, and tortured him.
The following week, he competed in a 20-man Six Sides of Steel match, where the last two men standing would be determined the captains of the Lethal Lockdown Match at Lockdown. He entered last and won the match by pinning rival Kurt Angle via the Muscle Buster. He then later stated backstage that he did not wish to be captain, but would still be part of the team. His teammates were Jeff Jarrett, A.J. Styles and the returning Daniels. They faced off against The Main Event Mafia at Lockdown, and won the match.[51] At this time he also revealed that he was taking orders from a "secret advisor" who he was seen talking to many times backstage although the person's identity was not revealed. He then feuded with Kevin Nash as his next victim of the Mafia and finally beat his old mentor at Sacrifice.[52]
At Slammiversary, Joe betrayed A.J. Styles and turned on all the fans by helping Kurt Angle win the TNA World Heavyweight Championship in the King of the Mountain match, and thus turned heel.[53] On the June 25 episode of Impact!, Joe officially joined The Main Event Mafia after having spent the last five months taking them out. This was revealed by Angle, to be a master plan to fool the TNA Frontline and the attacks were all planned by Joe and the Mafia in advance. Joe then went on to explain that he joined the Mafia for the money that was invested by Jenna Morasca and for the power and also debuted a new rap themed, entrance music. Throughout the night, he carried out attacks with the Mafia on Styles and Daniels and the leader of the Mafia, Sting, who was kicked out of the Mafia as leader and once again replaced with Kurt Angle.[54] At Victory Road, Joe faced Sting in a grudge match. Late in the match, Taz made his TNA debut and helped Joe beat Sting, thus revealing himself as his new adviser.[55] At Hard Justice Joe defeated Homicide to win the X Division title for the fourth time.[56] After winning this title, Joe feuded with his longtime rival Daniels and defeated him at No Surrender.[57] On the October 8 edition of Impact! Joe lost the X Division title to Amazing Red after Bobby Lashley interfered in the match.[58] At Bound for Glory Lashley defeated Joe in a submission match with a referee stoppage.[59] On the following edition of Impact! Kurt Angle turned into a fan favorite, thus signaling the end of the Main Event Mafia.[60] The following month at Turning Point Joe unsuccessfully challenged TNA World Heavyweight Champion A.J. Styles for the title in a three-way match, also involving Daniels.[61]
Nation of Violence (2009–2011)
At Final Resolution Joe took part in the "Feast or Fired" match and won the briefcase containing a shot at the TNA World Heavyweight Championship.[62] After being off TV for several weeks, Joe returned on the February 4 edition of Impact!, by attacking A.J. Styles, who had recently turned heel with Ric Flair, and announcing that he would be using his "Feast or Fired" briefcase to get a shot at Styles' World Heavyweight Championship at Against All Odds, turning face in the process.[63] At the pay-per-view Styles retained his title against Joe in a No Disqualification match refereed by Eric Bischoff.[64] After losing a match against new TNA acquisition Orlando Jordan on the following Impact!, Joe was abducted by masked men.[65] On March 29 he resurfaced in a video package on an episode of Impact!.[66] Joe made his return on the April 19 edition of Impact! appearing as a surprise member of Team Hogan (Abyss, Jeff Jarrett and Rob Terry) in an eight-man tag team match against Team Flair (Sting, Desmond Wolfe, Robert Roode and James Storm), in which he scored the deciding pinfall by pinning Roode after a Muscle Buster. Joe then left the Impact Zone and did not celebrate with his fellow team members.[67] His abduction never was explained. According to Joe, Vince Russo planned a big storyline with a psycho gimmick. However, Russo called him to return because he need more babyfaces and Russo never find the way to explain the abduction.[10] The following week Joe inexplicably assaulted the X Division Champion Kazarian, after his title match with Shannon Moore.[68] In the following weeks Joe went on to randomly attack wrestlers like Douglas Williams, Brian Kendrick and Matt Morgan, the last of whom lost the TNA World Tag Team Championship thanks to the attack.[69][70]
On the May 20 edition of Impact! Joe was ranked number ten in the first ever TNA Championship Committee rankings for a World Heavyweight Championship title shot.[71] He began his climb up the rankings by defeating Hernandez on June 17, number four ranked A.J. Styles on July 1 and by wrestling number two ranked Jeff Hardy to a ten-minute time limit draw on the July 22 edition of Impact!.[72][73][74] After the match with Hardy, Joe was upset with the production crew for starting a countdown to the time limit draw, when Joe specifically requested not to start one because he thought it would reveal the ending of the match early. Because of his outburst, Joe was suspended from TNA indefinitely.[75][76] Joe returned from his suspension on August 23 at the tapings of the August 26 edition of Impact! to defeat Orlando Jordan.[77] The following week on Impact!, Joe aligned himself with Jeff Jarrett and Hulk Hogan in their war with Sting and Kevin Nash.[78] At No Surrender Joe and Jarrett defeated Sting and Nash in a tag team match, when Joe choked out Sting, after Jarrett had hit him with his baseball bat behind Joe's back.[79] At Bound for Glory Joe and Jarrett faced Sting, Nash and their newest ally D'Angelo Dinero in a handicap match, after Hulk Hogan, who was scheduled to team with Joe and Jarrett, was forced to pull out due to a back surgery. At the end of the match Jarrett abandoned Joe and left him to be pinned by Nash. Later in the night it was revealed that Hogan was in fact in the building as he helped Jeff Hardy win the TNA World Heavyweight Championship and formed a new heel alliance with Hardy, Eric Bischoff, Jeff Jarrett and Abyss.[80]
Joe tried to attack Jarrett on the October 21 edition of Impact!, but was stopped by TNA's security officers Gunner and Murphy, before being beat down by Jarrett.[81] Joe returned two weeks later, attacking Jarrett, Gunner and Murphy.[82] At Turning Point Jarrett defeated Joe, after choking him out with a baton, following interference from Gunner and Murphy.[83] The following month at Final Resolution Joe faced Jarrett in a submission match. After a pre–match assault and later an interference by Gunner and Murphy, Jarrett managed to force Joe to submit with an ankle lock.[84] Earlier that same day it was reported that Joe's contract with TNA had expired.[85] On December 17, 2010, TNA president Dixie Carter announced on her Twitter page that Joe had re–signed with the promotion.[86][87] Joe returned on the January 6, 2011, edition of Impact!, confronting D'Angelo Dinero and claiming that he had not been using his donations to help the needy, like he was supposed to.[88] Two weeks later Okato was revealed as the camera man, whom Joe had hired to follow Dinero and from whom he had gotten the video footage to support his claim.[89] On February 13 at Against All Odds Joe defeated Dinero in a singles match, but was afterwards attacked and bloodied by him.[90] On the March 10 edition of Impact!, Dinero defeated Joe in a rematch between the two, after hitting him with a chain.[91] On April 17 at Lockdown, Joe defeated Dinero in a steel cage match to end the feud.[92]
Joe's next feud would be with the undefeated Crimson, whom he would abandon in the ring and the hands of Abyss on two occasions, claiming that he himself had not needed anyone's help during his own undefeated streak, becoming a tweener in the process.[93][94][95] On June 12 at Slammiversary IX, Joe was defeated by Crimson in a singles match, and afterwards shook Crimson's hand.[96] Afterwards, Joe began showing frustration as his losing streak continued with losses against Rob Van Dam, Devon, Kazarian and Bobby Roode.[97][98][99][100] After losing all nine of his matches in the Bound for Glory Series to determine the number one contender to the TNA World Heavyweight Championship, Joe finally ended his long losing streak on the August 4 edition of Impact Wrestling by defeating D'Angelo Dinero via submission, but the decision was reversed after he refused to release his hold following the match. Joe then accused TNA management of being against him and proclaimed that from now on the blood would be on their hands.[101] After voicing his intention of ruining the Bound for Glory Series, Joe attacked its participants Devon, D'Angelo Dinero and rankings leader Crimson, who was forced to pull out of the tournament following the attack, after suffering a storyline ankle injury.[102][103] On the final week of the Bound for Glory Series, Joe went to interfere in a match between Gunner and Rob Van Dam, but was stopped by guest color commentator Matt Morgan, who was sidelined with a torn pectoral muscle. This led to a brawl later in the evening, which ended with Joe hitting Morgan in the arm with a steel chair.[104] On September 11 at No Surrender, Joe continued his losing streak as he was defeated by Morgan in a grudge match.[105] On the following edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe ended his losing streak by defeating Morgan in a submission match.[106] After returning from his injury, Crimson scored two more victories over Joe, first defeating him in a singles match on the October 6 edition of Impact Wrestling, and then in a three-way match, also involving Matt Morgan, at Bound for Glory on October 16.[107][108]
Teaming and feuding with Magnus (2011–2012)
On the January 5, 2012, edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe and Magnus defeated A.J. Styles and Kazarian to win the four-week-long Wild Card Tournament and become the number one contenders to the TNA World Tag Team Championship.[109][110][111] Magnus said that Vince Russo put them as a tag team because "we were both always pissed off, so we could be pissed off together".[112] Three days later at Genesis, Joe and Magnus failed to capture the TNA World Tag Team Championship from Crimson and Matt Morgan.[113] Despite the loss, Joe and Magnus remained together as a tag team, attacking Crimson and Morgan on the next two editions of Impact Wrestling.[114][115] On the February 2 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe and Magnus defeated Crimson and Morgan in a non-title match to earn another shot at the TNA World Tag Team Championship.[116] On February 12 at Against All Odds, Joe and Magnus defeated Crimson and Morgan to win the TNA World Tag Team Championship.[117] Joe and Magnus then defeated Crimson and Morgan in two rematches, the first on the February 23 episode of Impact Wrestling and the second on March 18 at Victory Road, to retain the championship.[118][119] On the March 22 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe and Magnus successfully defended their title against Mexican America (Anarquia and Hernandez).[120] On April 15 at Lockdown, Joe and Magnus defeated The Motor City Machine Guns in a steel cage match to retain the TNA World Tag Team Championship.[121] During the first "Open Fight Night" on April 26, Joe and Magnus successfully defended the TNA World Tag Team Championship against the team of Jeff Hardy and Mr. Anderson, after which they were attacked by Christopher Daniels and Kazarian, who had asked for a title shot earlier in the event.[122] On May 13 at Sacrifice, Joe and Magnus lost the TNA World Tag Team Championship to Daniels and Kazarian.[123]
On the May 31 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe had a run-in with X Division Champion Austin Aries, which led to Joe costing Aries his match with Crimson the following week.[124][125] On June 10 at Slammiversary, Joe unsuccessfully challenged Aries for the X Division Championship.[126] On the following episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe entered the 2012 Bound for Glory Series, taking part in the opening gauntlet match, from which he was the last man eliminated by James Storm.[127] On July 8 at Destination X, Joe defeated old rival Kurt Angle via submission to become the new points leader in the Bound for Glory Series.[128] When the group stage of the tournament concluded on September 6, Joe finished second behind James Storm, thus advancing to the semifinals.[129] Three days later at No Surrender, Joe was eliminated from the tournament, after losing to Jeff Hardy in his semifinal match.[130] On the September 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe defeated Mr. Anderson to win the vacant TNA Television Championship, making him TNA's third Grand Slam Champion.[131][132] Joe made his first successful title defense the following week, defeating Rob Van Dam.[133] On October 14 at Bound for Glory, Joe successfully defended his title against former tag team partner Magnus.[134] Joe continued making successful defenses the following weeks, defeating Robbie E on the October 18 episode of Impact Wrestling,[135] and Robbie T the following week.[136] Joe then resumed his rivalry with former partner Magnus, defeating him via disqualification on the November 1 episode of Impact Wrestling, after being hit with a wrench.[137] The rivalry culminated in a No Disqualification match on November 11 at Turning Point, where Joe was again successful in retaining the title.[138] On the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe lost the Television Championship to Devon after DOC of Aces & Eights hit him with a ball-peen hammer.[139] Three days later at Final Resolution, Joe teamed with Garett Bischoff, Kurt Angle, and Wes Brisco to defeat Devon, DOC, and two masked members of Aces & Eights in an eight-man tag team match.[140] On the January 3, 2013, episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe and Kurt Angle defeated Devon and a masked member of Aces & Eights in a steel cage tag team match. Afterwards, the returning Sting saved Joe and Angle from a beatdown from Aces & Eights before revealing the mystery member as the debuting Mike Knox.[141] On January 13 at Genesis, Joe was defeated by Mr. Anderson in a singles match, following interference from Mike Knox.[142] On March 10 at Lockdown, Team TNA, consisting of Joe, Eric Young, James Storm, Magnus, and Sting defeated Aces & Eights, consisting of Devon, DOC, Garett Bischoff, Mike Knox, and Mr. Anderson in a Lethal Lockdown match.[143] On the March 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe was defeated by Jeff Hardy in a four-way number one contenders match for the World Heavyweight Championship, which also included Kurt Angle and Magnus.[144] On the April 18 episode of Impact Wrestling, Devon was scheduled to defend his Television Championship against Magnus, however, he was attacked by DOC and Knux before the match could start. Joe was then awarded the title match in his place, but Devon retained the title after interference from Aces & Eights.[145]
New Main Event Mafia (2013–2014)
Joe returned on the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling, saving former tag team partner Magnus from an attack by Aces & Eights.[146] On June 2 at Slammiversary XI, Joe teamed with Jeff Hardy and Magnus in a winning effort against Aces & Eights (Garett Bischoff, Mr. Anderson, and Wes Brisco).[147] On the following episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe defeated Robbie E to qualify for the 2013 Bound for Glory Series.[148] During the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, Joe was helped to a submission victory over Mr. Anderson in his Bound For Glory Series match after Kurt Angle and Sting took out Anderson's fellow Aces and Eights members, and was then named as the third member of their New Main Event Mafia.[149] On October 10, 2013, he added himself to the Ultimate X match in Bound For Glory against Manik, Austin Aries, Chris Sabin and Jeff Hardy. At Bound for Glory, Sabin won the match. In November 7, The Main Event Mafia was "temporarily disbanded" by Sting, and Samoa Joe was put in the World Title Tournament. His first round matchup on against former Main Event Mafia stable-partner Magnus will be a Fall Count Anywhere match on Turning Point PPV (which became a free-Spike TV event) on November 21. On November 14 episode of Impact, Samoa Joe aired his grievances over the botched contract negotiations between Dixie Carter and AJ Styles, and will defend his title with Styles if he wins the title.[150] At Turning Point, Joe was defeated by Magnus in the first round of the tournament for the vacant TNA World Heavyweight Championship.[151] On the December 12 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe was unsuccessful in grabbing any of the four cases in a Feast or Fired match against Austin Aries, Chris Sabin, Curry Man, Dewey Barnes, James Storm, Norv Fernum, Gunner, Chavo Guerrero, Zema Ion and Hernandez.[152] On the January 1, 2014 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe talked to Dixie, telling her about what AJ said in regards to having a locker room full of friends. Dixie ignoring what Joe previously said, told him to only focus on his match against her nephew, Ethan Carter III. Later on the show, Joe is jumped backstage by EC3, only to fight back on their way to the ring to start the match. Joe went on to win the match by disqualification after taking a hit from a wrench by EC3 after an interference by Rockstar Spud.[153] On Day 1 of Genesis, Joe, along with James Storm, Gunner, Eric Young, Joseph Park, and ODB, won a 12-man tag team match against The BroMans (Jessie Godderz, Robbie E, and Zema Ion), Bad Influence (Christopher Daniels and Kazarian) and Lei'D Tapa after Daniels submitted to his Coquina Clutch.[154] On Day 2 of Genesis, Joe defeated Rockstar Spud by submission after a Muscle Buster, followed by the Coquina Clutch, holding it until Spud passed out. Joe later helped in leveling the playing field in Sting's match against Magnus for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship, following interferences by EC3, Bad Influence, The BroMans and Bobby Roode, with Sting's contract voided if he lost.[155]
Championship pursuits and The Beat Down Clan (2014–2015)
On the January 30 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe teamed up with Kurt Angle to win a tag team match by submission against Magnus and Ethan Carter III.[156] On the February 6 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe faced off with Bobby Roode to decide the No. 1 contender for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship, in which Joe won after applying the Coquina Clutch and making Roode submit.[157] On the February 13 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe, along with The Wolves, defeated The BroMans and Zema Ion.[158] On the February 20 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe cut a promo saying he gets to face the winner of Magnus-Gunner at Lockdown and issued an open challenge to any resident of Dixieland, in which The BroMans and Zema Ion responded back. Eventually, Joe would win the 3-on-1 handicap match against the trio.[159] On the February 27 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe defeated Bad Bones in a singles match, after being asked to prove himself by Magnus if he wanted to cheap shot him as he did earlier in the night.[160] On March 9, 2014 at Lockdown, Joe lost to Magnus in a Steel Cage match for the TNA World Championship after an attack from Abyss; the match was held under "Joe's Rules", i.e. it could only be ended via knockout or submission.[161] On the March 13 edition of Impact Wrestling, MVP booked Joe to face Abyss later in the night, in which Joe won by disqualification after Eric Young ran out to hit a missile dropkick on Abyss after going for Janice. Joe competed in a fatal four way match for the TNA World Championship with Eric Young, Abyss, and then-champion Magnus on April 3 which he lost. Joe has taken time off from TNA.[162] Samoa Joe made his return on May 29, and helped Eric Young and Bully Ray fend off MVP, Bobby Lashley and Kenny King all by himself. On June 27 (Aired August 2, 2014) Joe defeated Low Ki and Sanada to win the TNA X Division title for the first time in nearly 4 years. At Hardcore Justice, Joe successfully defended the X Division Championship against Low Ki after pinning him with a muscle buster. However, he was stripped from the title due an injury. At Bound for Glory, TNA gave him the title back for one night to defend it against Low Ki and Kaz Hayashi.
On the January 7, 2015 edition of Impact Wrestling, Joe helped Lashley regain the TNA World Heavyweight Championship with the help of MVP, Kenny King, Low Ki and Roode's friend Eric Young, turning Joe and the last two into heels in the process. On the following night's tapings of the January 16, 2015 episode of Impact Wrestling, MVP presented the group as his "family" and officially christened them the Beat Down Clan, following which MVP attempted to present Lashley as the centerpiece of the Clan as well as a "founding member" (officially establishing the MVP-Lashley-King trio as the foundation of the BDC as a faction). However, Lashley refused to become a part of this new group and decided to leave, but was attacked by the other members with MVP saying that the title belongs to the BDC. On February 6, 2015 at Lockdown, Team Angle (Kurt Angle, Austin Aries, Gunner and Lashley) defeated The BDC (MVP, Samoa Joe, Low Ki and Kenny King) in a Lethal Lockdown match.
On February 17, 2015, Joe announced that he had "decided to part ways" with TNA, thus removing him from the BDC and ending his run of nearly a decade with the company.[163]
Pro Wrestling Noah (2007, 2012)
On October 25, 2007, Joe made his debut for Pro Wrestling Noah at the Yokohoma Red Brickhouse, where he teamed with Yoshihiro Takayama to take on the team of Mitsuharu Misawa and Takeshi Morishima. Joe captured the win for his team after pinning Misawa with an Island Driver.[164] Two days later, Joe again faced Misawa, this time for the GHC Heavyweight Championship in a one-on-one match at the Budokan Hall. Both competitors had exchanged and overcame their respective signature moves throughout the match, but it was Misawa who won the pinfall after striking the back of Joe's head with his elbow thus marking his sixth successful title defense.[165]
On July 22, 2012, Joe returned to Pro Wrestling Noah, when he and Magnus defeated Akitoshi Saito and Jun Akiyama to win the GHC Tag Team Championship.[166][167] On October 8, Joe and Magnus lost the title to Kenta and Maybach Taniguchi in their first defense.[168][169]
Other promotions
From 2003 to 2007, Joe made several appearances for Southern California promotion Pro Wrestling Guerrilla (PWG), making his debut on November 15, 2003, when he defeated CM Punk in a singles match.[170] During his time in the promotion, Joe had a notable on-screen rivalry with Super Dragon and unsuccessfully challenged Dragon for his PWG Championship on February 12, 2005.[171] After Dragon had lost the title, Joe defeated him in a grudge match on August 19, 2005.[172] Joe received another shot at the PWG Championship the following November, but was this time defeated by Kevin Steen.[173] Joe made his to date final PWG appearance on April 8, 2007, when he defeated Low Ki in a singles match.[174]
From 2004 to 2006, Joe also made several appearances for Independent Wrestling Association Mid-South (IWA-MS), where he most notably made it to the finals of the 2004 Ted Petty Invitational and, later that same year, won the Revolution Strong Style Tournament.[2]
On March 10, 2006, Joe made his debut for the Mexican Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA) promotion at Rey de Reyes, where he teamed with Konnan and Ron Killings as Team TNA in a four-way twelve-man tag team match, which was won by AAA representatives Octagón, La Parka and Vampiro.[175] Joe returned to the promotion the following September at Verano de Escándalo, where he represented TNA first in an eight-man tag team match, where he, A.J. Styles, Homicide and Low Ki defeated Abismo Negro, Charly Manson, Electroshock and Histeria, and then in a six-man tag team match, where he, Styles and Low Ki defeated the Mexican Powers (Crazy Boy, Joe Líder and Juventud Guerrera).[176] Joe returned to the promotion in July 2011, when he represented La Sociedad in two six man tag team matches. First at a AAA television taping on July 16, he, L.A. Park and Scott Steiner defeated Dr. Wagner, Jr., Electroshock and El Zorro,[177] and then on July 31 at Verano de Escándalo, he, Silver King and Último Gladiador were defeated by the team of Drago, Electroshock and Heavy Metal.[178]
On February 14, 2009, Joe made debuted for the Puerto Rican International Wrestling Association (IWA) at Noche de Campeones,[179] where he unsuccessfully challenged El Chicano for the IWA Undisputed World Unified Heavyweight Championship.[179] Prior to the show, Joe spent time with fans in a "Meet and Greet" event.[180]
On November 3, 2013, Joe made his debut at Championship Wrestling From Hollywood, against Willie Mack.[181] On November 3, Joe defeated Mack in the Main Event. On November 15, 2014, Joe appeared at JAPW 18th Anniversary Show, where he defeated Chris Hero.[182]
Throughout his career, Joe has also wrestled in Europe for promotions such German Stampede Wrestling (GSW),[183] International Pro Wrestling: United Kingdom (IPW:UK),[184] and Westside Xtreme Wrestling (wXw).[185]
Return to ROH (2015)
It was announced on February 24, 2015 that Samoa Joe would return to ROH for a number of appearances through March 2015.[186] On March 1, Samoa Joe made his ROH return confronting ROH World Champion Jay Briscoe and challenging him to a title match. On March 27 at Supercard of Honor IX, Samoa Joe returned to ROH in-ring action for the first time since 2008 to face Jay Briscoe, who defeated Samoa Joe to retain the ROH World Championship.[187] On March 29, Samoa Joe faced Kyle O'Reilly, whom he defeated.[188] On June 20, Joe wrestled his ROH farewell match, where he and A.J. Styles defeated ROH World Tag Team Champions Christopher Daniels and Frankie Kazarian.[189]
WWE
NXT (2015–present)
On May 20, 2015, at NXT TakeOver: Unstoppable, Joe made his debut as a face, during the main event after stopping Kevin Owens from attacking an injured Sami Zayn with a steel chair, before sharing a stare-down with Owens.[190] While initially Joe was allowed to also continue working outside WWE,[191] on June 1, it was reported that WWE had decided to sign him to a full-time deal due to his impressive merchandise sales.[192] Joe made his in-ring debut on the June 10 episode of NXT, defeating Scott Dawson.[193] After weeks of tension between Joe and Kevin Owens, the two fought on the June 17 episode of NXT. After the match went to a no-contest, the two would continue to brawl until they had to be separated.[194] Joe defeated Baron Corbin at NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn. On August 25, Joe teamed with Finn Bálor in a dark match before Smackdown defeating the The Lucha Dragons, which was a first round match in the Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic tournament. On the September 30 episode of NXT, Joe and Finn Bálor defeated the team of Enzo Amore and Colin Cassady to move onto the semi finals of the tournament. On the October 7 at NXT TakeOver: Respect, Joe and Bálor first defeated The Mechanics (Scott Dawson and Dash Wilder) in the semifinals and then Baron Corbin and Rhyno in the finals to win the tournament.[195] On the November 4 episode of NXT, Joe attacked Finn Bálor during Bálor's match against Apollo Crews, turning heel in the process.[196]
On the November 11 episode of NXT, it was explained that Samoa Joe was not granted an NXT title shot against Bálor despite his verbal commitment.[197] At NXT Takeover: London, on December 16, Joe was unsuccessful in his NXT championship match against Bálor. On the January 13, 2016 edition of NXT, Joe challenged Corbin and the returning Zayn to a #1 contender match. This occurred on the January 27 episode, but the result was a no contest when Corbin appeared to tap out to both opponents at the same time. Joe and Zayn then had a #1 contender rematch on the February 17 episode which resulted in a double pin draw, which led to a two out of three falls match on the March 9 episode. Joe won this contest two falls to one and earned another NXT title match against Bálor at NXT TakeOver: Dallas on April 1. At NXT TakeOver: Dallas, Joe was unsuccessful in winning the NXT title against Bálor, after receiving a large laceration to his right cheek minutes into the match. On April 21, during a live event, Joe defeated Bálor to win the NXT Championship for the first time.[198][199] In his first title defense, Joe defeated Bálor in a steel cage match at NXT TakeOver: The End on June 8.[200] Joe then engaged in a feud with Shinsuke Nakamura, who defeated him in a title match at NXT TakeOver: Back to Brooklyn, ending his reign of 121 days. During the match, Joe suffered a legitimate dislocated jaw.[201]
Personal life
Seanoa was married on July 27, 2007.[202] He is close friends with fellow wrestlers CM Punk, Homicide, Christopher Daniels, A.J. Styles, and Rob Van Dam.[16][203] He has appeared on Van Dam's Internet-based reality show RVD TV numerous times.[203][204]
Seanoa avidly trains in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, judo, and Muay Thai at LA Boxing in Costa Mesa, California. He is often noted as a sparring partner for Team Punishment member Justin McCully, and is often in attendance in the locker room for Team Punishment fighters such as Tito Ortiz and Kendall Grove, with whom he maintains friendships.[203][205]
Seanoa made brief appearances on the American version of the television show Distraction, participating in the round where wrestlers perform moves on contestants while they answer questions.[203]
On April 1, 2014, We Want Insanity announced the launch of Samoa Joe's official Twitch video game streaming channel.[206]
In wrestling
- Finishing moves
- CCS Enzuigiri[2] (Enzuigiri while facing away from a cornered opponent)[207] – 2000–2001; used as a signature move thereafter
- Chimera-Plex[2] (German suplex followed by a dragon suplex followed by a bridging X-Plex) – 2001–2005
- Coquina Clutch[4] / The Clutch[5] (TNA) / Rear naked choke,[2] sometimes transitioned into a suplex[208][209] (ROH/Independent circuit)
- Island Driver[2][208] (Sitout side powerslam,[12][210] sometimes from the second rope,[211] or an over the shoulder reverse piledriver)[212][213]
- Muscle buster,[4][5] sometimes from the second rope[208]
- Signature moves
- Corner forearm smash[2][207]
- Death Valley driver,[2] sometimes from the second rope[214]
- Facewash[2]
- Folding powerbomb transitioned into either a Boston crab,[215] an STF[207] or a crossface[207][216]
- Inverted atomic drop followed by a running single leg dropkick followed by a running senton[207]
- Lariat[2][208]
- Multiple suplex variations
- Running big boot to the face of an opponent seated on a chair next to a guardrail[2]
- Samoan drop[221]
- Samoan Elbow (Running delayed high-impact elbow drop, with theatrics)[2] – parodied from The Rock
- Standing release sidewalk slam[2]
- STF[2][208]
- STJoe (Side slam from out of the corner, as a counter to an oncoming opponent)[220]
- Suicide dive transitioned into an elbow smash[220]
- With Magnus
- Double team finishing moves
- Snapmare by Joe followed by a diving elbow drop by Magnus[116][117]
- Double team finishing moves
- Managers
- Nicknames
- Entrance themes
- Samoa Joe's various entrance themes in the past were typically customized to start with the "Godzilla March Theme" horn riff, signifying Joe's presence while allowing for different tracks over the years. TNA would adopt a variation of this tradition, starting their custom themes for Joe with a similar riff.
- "Another Body Murdered by Faith No More and Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E.[225] (ROH)
- "Mama Said Knock You Out" by LL Cool J[225] (ROH)
- "The Champ is Here" by Jadakiss[225] (ROH)
- "Crush You Up" by Dale Oliver[226] (TNA)
- "On Fire" by Dale Oliver[227] (TNA)
- "Nation of Violence" by Dale Oliver[228] (TNA)
- "Main Event Mafia" by Dale Oliver (TNA; used while a part of The Main Event Mafia)
- "The Anthem" by MVP and Jess Jamez (TNA; used while a part of The Beat Down Clan)
- "Tap Out" by Adam Gubman[225] (ROH)
- "Destroyer" by CFO$ (NXT; July 29, 2015 – present)[229][230]
Championships and accomplishments
- Ballpark Brawl
- Natural Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[231]
- Extreme Wrestling Federation
- Xtreme 8 Tournament (2006)[232]
- Independent Wrestling Association Mid-South
- Revolution Strong Style Tournament (2004)[2]
- Pro Wrestling Illustrated
- Feud of the Year (2007)[233] vs. Kurt Angle
- Most Popular Wrestler of the Year (2006)[234]
- PWI ranked him #4 of the 500 best singles wrestlers in the PWI 500 in 2006 and 2008[235][236]
- Pro Wrestling Noah
- GHC Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Magnus[166]
- Pro Wrestling Zero-One
- Pure Wrestling Association
- PWA Pure Wrestling Championship (1 time)[2]
- Ring of Honor
- SoCal Uncensored
- Rookie of the Year (2000)[237]
- Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
- TNA Television Championship (1 time)[131]
- TNA World Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[31]
- TNA World Tag Team Championship (2 times) – by himself (1)2 and Magnus (1)[31][117]
- TNA X Division Championship (5 times)[31]
- King of the Mountain (2008)[47]
- Maximum Impact Tournament (2011)[238]
- TNA X Division Championship Tournament (2014)
- Super X Cup (2005)[2]
- Feast or Fired (2009 – World Heavyweight Championship contract)
- TNA Turkey Bowl (2007)[2]
- Gauntlet for the Gold (2007 – Heavyweight)[239]
- Wild Card Tournament (2011) – with Magnus[111]
- Third TNA Grand Slam Champion[132]
- Third TNA Triple Crown Champion[31]
- Mr. TNA (2006)[240]
- Mr. X Division (2006)[240]
- Feud of the Year (2006–2007) with Kurt Angle[240][241]
- Finisher of the Year (2007) Muscle buster[241]
- Twin Wrestling Entertainment
- TWE Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- Ultimate Pro Wrestling
- UPW Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[242]
- UPW No Holds Barred Championship (1 time)[242]
- United Independent Wrestling Alliance
- UIWA Tag Team Championship (2 times)[2]
- Wrestling Observer Newsletter
- 5 Star Match (2004) vs. CM Punk at ROH Joe vs. Punk II on October 16
- 5 Star Match (2005) vs. AJ Styles and Christopher Daniels at TNA Unbreakable on September 11[29]
- 5 Star Match (2005) vs. Kenta Kobashi at ROH Joe vs. Kobashi on October 1
- Best Brawler (2005, 2006)[243]
- Match of the Year (2005) vs. Kenta Kobashi, ROH Joe vs. Kobashi, October 1
- Most Outstanding Wrestler (2005)
- WWE
- NXT Championship (1 time)
- Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic (2015) – with Finn Bálor[195]
1 After the title was vacated, Joe and Sakoda's reign was stricken from the promotion's records.
2 Joe held the title by himself during his first reign.
Notes
- ^ a b Downey, Mike (2008-08-14). "So far, Beijing Games have been unbelievable". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-04-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq "Samoa Joe Bio". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
- ^ a b c Milner, John; Kamchen, Richard (2005-12-04). "Samoa Joe". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved 2008-10-17.
- ^ a b c d e "Samoa Joe". WWE.
- ^ a b c d "Stats from Joe's TNA profile". TNA Wrestling.com. Retrieved 2008-09-16.
- ^ Unstoppable: the Best of Samoa Joe. TNA Home Video. 2006.
- ^ Banks, Bill (2005-09-13). "An Exclusive Interview With Samoa Joe, once sushi joelini had stolen sushi of a sushi shop called sushirini". TNAwrestilng.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-04-23.
- ^ Hamilton, Ian. Wrestling's Sinking Ship: What Happens To An Industry Without Competition. Lulu Press, 2006. (pg. 67) ISBN 1-4116-1210-8
- ^ Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
- ^ a b http://solowrestling.com/issue/e/110/0/35333/samoa-joe-vince-russo-es-una-putita-que-tiene-la-audacia-para-culpar-a-otros-de-su-estupidez..html
- ^ "Zero One 2001 show Results".
(translated from German) Zero-One "Shingeki":Samoa Joe & Keiji Sakoda defeated Yuki Ishikawa & Katsumi Usuda (16:48)
- ^ a b "Zero One Fire Festival Results (200kdkdjdjejjdjdj1)".
(translated from German) Kohei Sato [2] defeated Samoa Joe [0] (8:25) with a Cross Armbreaker / Samoa Joe [2] defeated George Takano [1] (5:24) with a Lariat. / Samoa Joe [4] defeated Masato Tanaka [3] (8:00) with the Emerald Frosion
- ^ a b "Zero-1 Max Intercontinental Tag Team Championship history".
- ^ a b "N.W.A. Intercontinental Tag Team Title". Wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
- ^ a b c d e f "Ring of Honor official results". Ring of Honor. Archived from the original on 2007-02-27. Retrieved 2007-03-03.
- ^ a b Straight Shootin' with Samoa Joe (DVD). Ring of Honor. 2004.
- ^ a b "Ring of Honor Title". Ring of Honor. Retrieved 2010-04-05.
- ^ a b c "Ring of Honor Heavyweight Title History".
- ^ a b c "Ring Of Honor Pure Championship". Ring of Honor. Retrieved 2010-04-05.
- ^ a b c "Ring of Honor Pure Title History".
- ^ Randazzo, Anthony (2005-10-01). "ROH in Manhattan: Samoa Joe vs. Kenta Kobashi in match of year candidate". Pro Wrestling Torch.
- ^ Vetter, Chris (2006-09-10). "ROH, "Death Before Dishonor IV"". Pro Wrestling Torch.
- ^ "RoH Wrestling news". 2007-03-03.
February 2: The huge story of the week is that Joe announced his farewell tour to ROH in a very emotional promo in the new ROH Video Wire.
- ^ Martin, Adam (2008-11-23). "11/22 Ring of Honor Results: Chicago Ridge, IL". WrestleView. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
- ^ Waldman, Jon (2005-06-14). "Samoa Joe signs with TNA". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer.
- ^ "Full TNA "Slammiversary" Results". Archived from the original on 30 September 2007.
- ^ "Official Results From Sunday's "Sacrifice" on Pay-Per-View".
- ^ Schultz, Chris (2005-09-11). "Official TNA "Unbreakable" Results - AJ New X Champion!". TNA Wrestling.
- ^ a b Schramm, Chris (2009-06-18). "Daniels feels Detroit's economy won't hurt this Sunday's PPV". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
- ^ Cygy, Marcus (November 13, 2005). "Official Results From Sunday's "Genesis" Pay-Per-View". TNA Wrestling.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Total Nonstop Action Wrestling official title histories". TNAwrestling.com. Archived from the original on 2008-06-21. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
- ^ Cygy, Marcus (2005-01-16). "Official Live TNA "Turning Point 2005" Pay-Per-View Results". TNA Wrestling.
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- ^ http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/ringofhonor/article_84202.shtml
- ^ http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Arena_Reports_10/article_85755.shtml
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- ^ a b Howell, Nolan (October 7, 2015). "Bayley is the Iron Woman against Banks at NXT TakeOver: Respect". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved October 8, 2015.
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Match 9: Kenta Kobashi vs. Samoa Joe
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "411's TNA Impact Report 07.30.09". 411mania. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
- ^ "TNA - The Best of Samoa Joe: Unstoppable DVD Review". 411mania. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
- ^ Keller, Wade (2009-09-20). "TNA No Surrender Results: KELLER'S PPV REPORT including detailed match report, star ratings, analysis, quotebook". PWTorch. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
- ^ a b c "411's TNA Impact Report 7.23.09". 411mania. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
- ^ "ROH - Fight of the Century DVD Review". 411mania. Retrieved 2009-10-17.
- ^ "TNA Impact – 2008 08 14". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
- ^ Ultimate Pro Wrestling Training Volume 2: The Next Step. Santa Ana, California: Ultimate Pro Wrestling. 2000. Event occurs at approx. 26 minutes.
Known as the Samoan Suplex Machine, Samoa Joe brings years of judo training and raw grid iron attitude to UPW.
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- ^ a b UPW title history
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External links
- Samoa Joe on WWE.com
- Samoa Joe's profile at Cagematch.net , Wrestlingdata.com , Internet Wrestling Database
- Samoa Joe on Twitter
- SamoaJoeGames on Twitch
- ROH Wrestling profile
- 1979 births
- American male professional wrestlers
- American people of Samoan descent
- American professional wrestlers of Samoan descent
- American male judoka
- American Muay Thai practitioners
- American practitioners of Brazilian jiu-jitsu
- Sportspeople from Orange County, California
- Professional wrestlers from California
- Living people