Some women are born with a silver spoon in their mouth. Megumi Yabushita was born with a judo gi soaked in blood, sweat, and the dislocated shoulder of her opponent. She didn’t walk into combat sports—she stomped through the front door of the dojo and dared the gods to stop her. The problem was, they never could.
She was 5’2” of barely-contained mayhem from Asahikawa, Hokkaido—a place so cold and rugged that even the wind apologizes before it slaps you. In a town of hardened men and tougher women, she emerged as the “Grappling Goddess,” the “Ice Queen,” and perhaps the only woman alive who could cradle a limb in her hands and decide, on a whim, whether to snap it or shake it.
Judoka Before Breakfast, Warrior By Lunch
Before the world of ring ropes and MMA cages, there was the mat. Her father got her in a judo gi before she learned multiplication tables. High school national champion? That was just the warm-up act. Miki House, a corporate judo juggernaut, picked her up and tossed her into the crucible of competitive fighting. By 1993, she was Japan’s national champion. A year later, she was placing at international events. In 1995, she stepped into the World Judo Championships like a lioness surrounded by lambs—and even the lions kept their distance.
But medals don’t pay the bills, and titles can’t tame the restlessness in a fighter’s soul. So she left the safe elegance of ippon throws and entered the neon-lit jungle of pro wrestling and MMA.
Enter the Lioness Den of Jd’
When Yabushita joined the Jd’ promotion in 1996, she was still green, but the mat wasn’t new. She debuted in 1997, promptly choking out Sumie Sakai—who would become both her greatest rival and reluctant soulmate in pain. They would go on to win the TWWF tag belts together like Bonnie and Clyde in spandex. Except their robberies happened in the squared circle, and they always got away clean.
She won junior titles, unified belts, and formed tag teams like a woman trying to find the perfect partner in a world full of broken promises. She beat the bloody snot out of The Bloody, tangled with Crusher Maedomari, and made Yumi Ohka regret ever signing a contract. Somewhere along the way, she added the AWF World Women’s Title and the BS Japan Queen of the Ring belt to her resume—more hardware than a mid-tier Home Depot aisle.
She Bled for Smackgirl, and Smackgirl Bled for Her
Then came the pivot to MMA—a different beast, with sharper teeth and fewer rules. This was Yabushita’s playground, a dark corner of combat where tapouts were earned and blood was expected. She debuted in 1997 and made Ji Hee Yu fold like a cheap lawn chair via armbar. But it was in 2000, during the Smackgirl ReMix World Cup, where she went full berserker.
Facing Svetlana Goundarenko—a Russian monster who outweighed her by over 200 pounds—most fighters would’ve run for the exit. Yabushita ran straight toward the storm and left Goundarenko gasping for air, victim to relentless takedowns and a will so fiery it could melt glaciers. She lost in the finals to Marloes Coenen, but came out a damn national treasure.
From there it was blood, pain, and glory in equal measure. She beat American grappler Roxanne Modafferi, only to lose to her in the rematch. She got her back snapped, almost literally, by Erin Toughill’s illegal elbow strikes—but walked away the Smackgirl Openweight Champion anyway. Why? Because life, like Yabushita, is messy and unfair and refuses to apologize.
Fight Chix, Broken Limbs, and the American Dream
With her longtime ally Yoko Takahashi, Yabushita didn’t just train fighters. She started a gym—then another. When business turned political, she trained in bars, in live houses, anywhere with enough space to throw a body. She partnered with Fight Chix, an American clothing brand, and turned herself into a walking paradox: a fashion-forward mauler in a sports bra soaked with blood.
She traveled the world—Russia, the U.S., Korea—slamming bodies and tapping out kickboxers. She once knocked a woman out cold with a judo throw, not a punch. Just a throw. How many women can say they’ve done that? Hell, how many men?
Yabushita’s resume reads like an international incident report. Sarah Kaufman? TKO’d her. Rin Nakai? Took her to decision. Shayna Baszler? Twister submission. Lana Stefanac? Lost by decision to a woman 80 pounds heavier. And she never once said “no” to a fight. That wasn’t in her vocabulary.
Queen of the Shadows, Hero of the Hardcore
What made Megumi Yabushita special wasn’t her win-loss record—though it was extensive and hard-earned. It was the fire. The chip on her shoulder. The way she fought like the entire world owed her rent and she was ready to collect.
She was never the prettiest. She wasn’t marketed like an idol or wrapped in gloss and glitter. She came out to Kula Shaker’s “Hush” in wrestling and Visa’s “Fly Away” in MMA—both songs about silence and escape, which is ironic for someone who never shut up with her fists.
She represented every overlooked warrior, every woman told to sit down, every underdog who had no intention of rolling over. She was a force of nature with cauliflower ears and knuckles carved from granite. She didn’t smile for the cameras; she grimaced like a woman who’d just remembered her rent was due and the landlord was getting choked out.
Final Bell, Eternal Echo
Yabushita retired quietly by comparison to the chaos of her career. No stadium-filling sendoff, no tear-soaked press conference. Just a slow fade into history, her body probably held together by duct tape and resentment. But her shadow still looms large over rings and cages alike.
If you’re lucky, someday you’ll hear a young fighter talk about her—“I grew up watching Yabushita,” they’ll say, like she was a myth. But for those of us who remember? She was real. Too real.
Megumi Yabushita didn’t just fight. She was the fight.
