In the twisted family reunion of pro wrestling, you’ll find a lot of orphans and bastards — people clinging to gimmicks, chasing relevance like loose change in a gutter. And then there was Nodoka Tenma — billed as everyone’s “oneesan,” your warm and reckless big sister — the one who could smile like an anime protagonist and body slam you through your own childhood trauma.
She wasn’t just a wrestler. She was a bedtime story that came to dropkick the boogeyman.
Tokyo Joshi Pro: Where Fairy Tales Learn to Fight
Tenma’s first appearance in TJPW was in December 2015, where she got steamrolled by Yuu in an exhibition match that looked more like an overzealous sumo school hazing than a pro debut. But from day one, Tenma had the look of someone who didn’t mind being humbled — because humility, after all, is just fuel for the comeback.
She clawed her way into the scene, not with flash or fire, but with good, old-fashioned tenacity. You could see it in her lariats. You could hear it in the creak of the ropes. And you felt it when she finally got her due at Wrestle Princess I in 2020 — when she and her real-life sister, Yuki Aino, captured the Princess Tag Team Championship as the Bakuretsu Sisters, knocking off Miu Watanabe and Rika Tatsumi in a match that felt less like a contest and more like a house war fought with tear-stained gear.
The Bakuretsu Sisters weren’t just a team. They were a concept — built on pure, explosive heart. Tag wrestling with the intimacy of a kitchen brawl. You never saw one without the other. And when they hit their stride, they turned midcard matches into main event emotions.
She wasn’t gunning for five-star classics. She was trying to make the crowd feel something.
DDT: Glitter, Gimmicks, and Chaos
Being part of the TJPW family meant inevitable trips across the border into the madness of DDT Pro-Wrestling — where every battle royal was part match, part fever dream.
At Judgement 2016, she was tossed into a 13-woman cluster full of names that sounded like they were picked out of a bingo cage. Yuka Sakazaki won. Tenma didn’t. But she probably pancaked someone, smiled politely, and moved on.
Three years later at Judgement 2019, she and her sister were back in action, standing tall in victory over some of the toughest women on the scene. These were the matches where Tenma thrived — the chaotic, multi-woman scrambles where everyone fought for air and relevance. She didn’t need the spotlight. She was the ring glue. And when the big stages came — like Peter Pan 2019 — she stepped up alongside Aino and Rika Tatsumi to notch another win in the ledger.
It was never about dominance for Tenma. It was about reliability. She wasn’t the flame. She was the hearth.
The Sisterhood is Real
Most tag teams die the moment the merch stops selling. But Nodoka Tenma and Yuki Aino were blood sisters before they were champions — and probably suplexing each other over chores before they ever hit the dojo. Their chemistry was less “televised charisma” and more “bonds built on bruises.”
When they tagged, it wasn’t about showy sequences. It was trust. One would take the bullet. The other would throw the grenade. The Bakuretsu Sisters worked not because they were cute or clever — but because they believed in each other. You can’t fake that.
They fought across brands — TJPW, DDT, even at the CyberFight Festival 2021, where they lost to the manic energy of Hyper Misao and Shoko Nakajima and the graceful violence of Hakuchumu. But win or lose, they made every match a declaration: family is the strongest finisher in wrestling.
The Quiet Goodbye
She never made a grand exit. No retirement tour, no melodrama. Nodoka Tenma retired quietly in 2022, slipping out of the ring the same way she entered — with grace, warmth, and zero pretension.
She got married to wrestler Ryuichi Sekine in December that year. And just like that, the Bakuretsu firecracker hung up her boots and chose a life beyond the ropes. Maybe she’s yelling at her husband to take the trash out with the same intensity she used to charge a lariat. Maybe she’s watching the next generation from the crowd with a quiet smile and knees that finally get a rest.
But make no mistake: Nodoka-Oneesan left behind more than a career. She left behind a legacy of empathy, loyalty, and beautiful, thunderous tag team carnage.
Final Bell
There are workhorses. There are stars. And then there are those rare few — the anchors. Nodoka Tenma wasn’t a headliner. She didn’t have a belt in every photo or fireworks in her entrance.
But she made everyone around her better. Safer. Stronger.
And that — in this business of egos and elbow drops — might be the rarest title of them all.