She didn’t arrive in a red carpet limo. She didn’t post thirst traps on Instagram with glitter filters and fake eyelashes. Irena Janjic came in swinging—boots laced, teeth gritted, spine straight—and damn near kicked the front door off the Japanese wrestling scene. For a decade, she was the only foreign woman grinding full-time on Japan’s brutal indie joshi circuit. Not a tourist. Not a guest. A lifer. And they didn’t give her a sash and crown and call her royalty—she took it. Brick by brick. Kick by goddamn kick. That’s why they call her the Queen of Strong Style.
Janjic’s journey started far from the glitz of Tokyo or the neon grime of Osaka. She came out of Bosnia—scarred, complicated, proud. She wasn’t a child of privilege. No legacy spots, no connections. Just a girl with a chip on her shoulder and a thirst for collision. She found her way to Calgary, Alberta, Canada, where Lance Storm taught her how to bleed for a living without ever losing her cool. Six months in the storm dungeon, and she emerged like a tank with mascara—a new weapon built for war.
Her pro debut came on August 27, 2010, in Edmonton. No pyro. No scream-pop entrance. Just the dull thud of ring canvas and the kind of stiff shots that leave your breakfast in your throat. She fought like someone trying to exorcise ghosts—and maybe she was. The road from there wasn’t paved in velvet. It was dirt and grit and empty gyms in towns that didn’t know what they were witnessing.
The U.S. flirted with her in 2011. Florida Championship Wrestling let her in under the name Leah West, and for a heartbeat, it looked like she might find herself in the WWE system. But that door didn’t open wide enough for her brand of violence. So she did what most folks are too scared to do—she went east. Japan. The place where reputations are forged in sweat and stiff shots. The place where if you’re soft, you don’t last a week. Irena Janjic didn’t just last—she endured, she conquered, and she made it home.
For ten years, she freelanced full-time in Japan. That’s not a line on a résumé. That’s a hard truth. Japanese joshi promotions are unforgiving, fast, brutal, and political. But Janjic—now known to fans as Alex Lee—cut through that world like a dull blade pressed into fresh skin. She bled, she bruised, and she never begged for approval. The fans gave it anyway.
Sendai Girls’ Pro Wrestling became her proving ground. She wasn’t a poster girl. She wasn’t a merchandise machine. She was a kick-happy wrecking ball with a smirk, handing out concussions and cracking collarbones with the grace of a sniper. She tag-teamed with names like Mika Iwata and took part in massive battle royals alongside joshi legends like Meiko Satomura and Chihiro Hashimoto. These weren’t fantasy camps. These were minefields. And Janjic walked through them with bare feet and broken knuckles.
Oz Academy welcomed her into the madness, where she played the heel role like a venomous whisper—aligned with Ozaki-gun, dishing out punishment like unpaid debts. She chased tag titles with Yumi Ohka, cracked heads with Aja Kong, and stood in the goddamn ring during Manami Toyota’s retirement gauntlet. You don’t get booked for that if you’re just passing through. You get booked for that if you matter.
Her nickname—Queen of Strong Style—wasn’t a branding gimmick. It was a truth earned through bruised ribs and ten years of boots to the jaw. She blended classic joshi with blunt-force trauma, her kickboxing background fueling the kind of strikes that made arenas go quiet. Her suplexes were statements, her knees were threats, and her eyes told you she wasn’t bluffing.
She wrestled everywhere. Stardom gave her the spotlight in 2015 and 2016. She teamed with Sendai Sachiko. She battled Mayu Iwatani, Io Shirai, and Kairi Hojo. She didn’t always win. But she always left a mark. Like cigarette burns on silk, Janjic’s presence wasn’t clean—it was raw, honest, and impossible to ignore.
In a world where so many wrestlers chase clout, Irena Janjic chased chaos. She was the only foreign woman to stay in Japan for a full decade, not as a novelty, but as a necessary part of the fabric. No title belts were handed out for that. No YouTube documentaries were made. But inside those grimy locker rooms and fluorescent-lit gyms, the whispers were loud enough: she was the real deal.
Now, as time marches forward and bodies begin to betray their owners, it’s unclear if Irena Janjic has another run in her. Maybe the Queen of Strong Style will lace up the boots again. Maybe she’ll just smile at what she survived and fade out on her own terms.
But if there’s any justice in the wrestling world—and there usually isn’t—then someday, somewhere, a young wrestler will be throwing stiff kicks in a cold ring in Osaka, and someone in the back will mutter, “She reminds me of Alex Lee.”
And that? That’s the kind of legacy no belt can buy.
