Ryo Saito

Ryo Saito

Perfil

Ryo Saito

Películas

Dragon Gate Kobe Pro-Wrestling Festival 2019
In 2019, Dragon Gate celebrated its 20th anniversary with many wrestlers who worked for Dragon Gate, returned to the company such as Takuya Sugawara, Shuji Kondo and most notably the founder of Toryumon Japan (which later became Dragon Gate), Último Dragón. In 2019, PAC became the first gaijin to take part in the main event of the Kobe Pro-Wrestling Festival event.
Dragon Gate The Gate Of Origin 2018
Dragon Gate The Gate Of Origin 2018
DGUSA Heat 2013
Dragon Gate USA presents Heat 2013 held in Huntington Park, CA. AR Fox teams with Akira Tozawa to take on The Young Bucks in the Main Event!
Dragon Gate USA REVOLT! 2013
Dragon Gate USA rolls on with their big triple-shot weekend as Revolt! 2013 comes at you tonight live on iPPV.
DGUSA Open the Golden Gate 2013
John Morrison comes to Dragon Gate USA to face Akira Tozawa in this evening of fast-paced action.
Dragon Gate USA Freedom Fight 2012
An insane four-way highlights the third night of this big weekend!
Dragon Gate USA Uprising 2012
The Open The United Gate Tag Team Titles headline the second night of this three show weekend!
Dragon Gate USA Fearless 2012
A Battle for Respect headlines Dragon Gate USA's return to Massachusetts.
ROH: Better Than Our Best
Himself
ROH Better Than Our Best was an event by Ring of Honor. It took place on April 1, 2006 at the Frontier Fieldhouse in Chicago Ridge, Illinois.
ROH: Supercard of Honor
Himself
ROH Supercard of Honor was an event by Ring of Honor. It took place on March 31, 2006 at the Frontier Fieldhouse in Chicago Ridge, Illinois.
ROH: Dragon Gate Challenge
Himself
ROH Dragon Gate Challenge was an event by Ring of Honor. It took place on March 30, 2006 at the Michigan State Fairgrounds & Expo Center in Detroit, Michigan.
DGUSA Untouchable 2009
Ryo Saito
Untouchable / Open The Untouchable Gate was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Dragon Gate USA that was taped September 6, 2009 at the Congress Theater in Chicago, Illinois and aired on November 6, 2009.
ROH: Top 100 Matches, Vol 2
Himself
Volume Two, matches 46-1.
ROH: Year 5
Himself
The best matches from Ring of Honor in 2006.
ROH: Japan's Finest
Himself
Since its inception, Ring of Honor has prided itself on presenting the absolute best professional wrestling on the planet with the top athletes not just from the United States but from around the world. In that endeavor, we have been graced with the presence of numerous wrestlers from the world of Japanese Puroresu; from young up & comers to the legends of the squared circle, ROH has been home to them all over the years. Be it Jushin 'Thunder' Liger & The Great Muta or Go Shiozaki & Dragon Kid, they have all competed here and enriched the great history of ROH.
The Briscoe Brothers: The Baddest Tag Team on the Planet
Himself
Jay & Mark Briscoe have defined tag team wrestling in Ring of Honor since day one. As part of ROH from the very first event in 2002, the brothers from Sandy Fork, DE have captured the ROH World Tag Titles multiple times with a fast-paced, hard-hitting, risk-taking style that has certainly cemented them as ROH legends. As a duo, they have faced every team that has ever set foot into the ROH ring and dominated them with their tag team excellence and with their willingness to brawl it out if the situation calls for it. With their title bouts against teams such as Austin Aries & Roderick Strong, their brutal Ladder War, or their state of the art contests against Alex Shelley & Chris Sabin, Jay & Mark Briscoe have demonstrated why they are the most respected team in ROH history. Fearless, confident and driven, the Briscoe Brothers are indeed The Baddest Tag Team on the Planet!
Alex Shelley: Made in Detroit
Himself
"Talent on loan from God" - that is how Alex Shelley referred to himself the night Generation Next made its debut in Philadelphia and given the amazing wrestling abilities he has displayed throughout his career, it's a nickname hard to discredit. Even before he helped found the group, during his tag team and subsequent rivalry with Jimmy Jacobs, Alex Shelley demonstrated gifts few wrestlers possess and it only blossomed further under the GenNext banner. Battles with Jay Lethal, Doug Williams, and Bryan Danielson honed his technical prowess and prepared Alex for what would come next as he was exiled from the group he founded...