By the time Suzume hit the ropes in Tokyo Joshi Pro-Wrestling, the world had already decided what to make of her: five feet of sugar, frills, and a smile bright enough to blind an indie crowd into forgetting this was pro wrestling and not a goddamn pop idol showcase. But somewhere between the pastel dazzle and the BeeStar break-up, something snapped. Maybe it was her pride. Maybe it was her patience. Or maybe it was just the cold realization that in this business, if you don’t kick someone’s head off, you’re the one selling T-shirts at the merch table while someone else signs the check.
Suzume—real name, ring name, and yes, that means “sparrow” in Japanese—is not the bird you want to underestimate. She came in cute, but she stayed because she’s scrappy. And underneath the cheerful façade is a workhorse who spent five years being told she was “almost there.” Now? She’s a former International Princess Champion, tag title holder, and winner of the 2024 Futari wa Princess tournament. In short, she’s not your mascot anymore. She’s your problem.
From Izumi to Identity
She debuted in 2019 under the forgettable alias Izumi, the kind of name you give a local diner waitress in an after-school drama. She lasted one match like that—a time-limit draw with Mirai Maiumi. And if that sounds anticlimactic, welcome to the world of Tokyo Joshi: a company that blends slapstick, idol culture, and forearms to the neck.
It wasn’t long before Izumi disappeared and Suzume—all glitter wings and an underdog complex—emerged. The ring gear looked like a cotton candy explosion, but the footwork said lucha fundamentals and the drive of someone who really, really hated losing.
She flailed. She fell. And then she started to sting.
A Daisy with a Death Wish
Tagging with Arisu Endo under the name “Daisy Monkey”—which sounds like a preschool punk band but punches like a death metal duo—Suzume started racking up real wins. The chemistry was tight. The moveset was tighter. Dropkicks with conviction. Rope running like a hummingbird on meth. Suddenly, the girl in sparkles was outworking everyone not named Yamashita.
The payoff came at Grand Princess ’24, when Suzume and Endo stole the show (and the Princess Tag Team Championships) from Ryo Mizunami and Yuki Aino. It wasn’t just a win—it was a declaration: the cute girls can kill, too.
And then came Tokyo Joshi Pro ’25. January 4. Suzume takes down Yuki Arai for the International Princess Championship. A title that says, “You’re not the top, but you’re damn close.” She held it like it was made of blood, not metal.
The Tournament Circuit: Heartbreak in Stages
Suzume’s Tokyo Princess Cup resume is a Greek tragedy in glitter boots. Each year was a chapter in suffering:
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2020: Beats Haruna Neko, loses to Mizuki.
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2021: Sinks Mahiro Kiryu, gets clobbered by Maki Itoh.
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2022: Her best run—takes down Pom, knocks off Rika Tatsumi, then runs into a Yuka Sakazaki buzzsaw in the semis.
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2023: One and done, courtesy of Shoko Nakajima.
She’s always almost there. Close enough to smell the final bell, far enough to feel the sting. If this was a romcom, the audience would be screaming “JUST LET HER WIN ONE!” at the screen. But this is wrestling. No one gets a happy ending unless they take it.
The Wrestle Princess Curse
Four years, four heartbreaks.
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2020: First show. Tags with Sena Shiori, wins. No one remembers.
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2021: Loses in a tag against Riho and Nakajima. Brutal.
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2022: Singles loss to Ryo Mizunami. Even more brutal.
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2023: Loses an 8-person cluster against Neo Biishiki-gun. Mostly played comic relief.
Every year, she shows up, heart full of hope, and every year, the fairy tale turns into a public mugging. If you listen closely, you can hear the universe laughing.
CyberFight and Beyond: A Girl in a Man’s World
Suzume’s work outside TJPW has been limited but strategic. She’s a foot soldier in CyberFight’s strange alliance war—thrown into ten-woman tags with names you barely remember, but she always walks out having stolen a moment. That’s the Suzume guarantee: she’s not gonna win the match, but she’s gonna make you remember the way she folded someone with a hurricanrana from hell.
In DDT, she’s been the chaos in a sea of chaos. In GCW, she picked up a win in a three-way that felt more like a fever dream than a wrestling match. Pom Harajuku and Saki never stood a chance. Suzume hits you like a glitch in the matrix—short, sharp, and weirdly satisfying.
Inside the Ring and the Mind
She cites Rika Tatsumi as her hero. And maybe that’s all you need to know—because Tatsumi isn’t flashy. She’s not loud. She’s a tactician in pink. Suzume took that energy and dialed it up ten volts. Her moves aren’t just pretty—they’re problem-solving in motion.
She also designs her own ring gear, which is fitting. Every costume, every stitch, is a form of armor. You don’t go to war looking like that unless you’re planning to confuse your enemy—and then hit them with a dropkick to the teeth while they’re still figuring out if you’re serious.
And make no mistake: Suzume is serious.
The Future: Buzz, Burnout, or Breakthrough?
She’s 26. Already a former International Princess Champion. A tag team champ. Tournament winner. Semifinal heartbreak. Always the bridesmaid. Never the queen bee.
But maybe that’s what makes her dangerous. Because Suzume is tired of being told what she looks like. She wants to be seen for what she is: a fighter. A striker. A technician. A technician with a sugar coating and an iron soul.
The TJPW brass can keep pushing Yamashita and Itoh and Sakazaki into the spotlight, but Suzume will be there, smiling politely, before launching herself into a spinning heel kick that takes their heads off.
Because the next time she steps into Wrestle Princess, she’s not playing nice. She’s bringing hell in pigtails.
