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・ Plum Island (Wisconsin)
・ Plum Island Airport
・ Plum Island Animal Disease Center
・ Plum Island Eagle Sanctuary
・ Plum Island Light
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・ Plum Lake (Jackson County, Minnesota)
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Plum Mariko
・ Plum Mariko Memorial Show
・ Plum Orchard
・ Plum Orchard Lake
・ Plum Orchard Lake Wildlife Management Area
・ Plum Orchard, West Virginia
・ Plum Park in Kameido
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・ Plum Point, Virginia
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Plum Mariko : ウィキペディア英語版
Plum Mariko

(November 1, 1967 - August 16, 1997; born was a Japanese female professional wrestler who wrestled for Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling from 1986 to 1992 and then, JWP Joshi Puroresu from 1992 until her death in 1997. Mariko was the first professional wrestler in Japan to die as a result of injuries suffered in a wrestling match.
==Career==
During her career, Mariko received many ring injuries which eventually resulted in a brain abscess. She had previously suffered several concussions, but continued to wrestle. On August 15, 1997 she teamed with Command Bolshoi against Mayumi Ozaki and Rieko Amano at the Hiroshima Sun Plaza, Hiroshima. At the matches conclusion, Ozaki used one of her regular moves, the ''Ligerbomb'', to pin Mariko. The move was executed just as usual, but appeared to have triggered a pre-existing problem. Since other wrestlers on the card had sold their finishes that night, the fans in the arena didn’t immediately realize there was a problem. It seems that this spot may not have been the planned finish of the match. In any case, Mariko was knocked out from the Ligerbomb and didn’t kick out. After the match, Ozaki and the other wrestlers saw Mariko, who still hadn't budged, snoring, which was a sign that her brain was bleeding. Mariko died a few hours later on August 16, 1997.
No postmortem was performed on her at the request of her father. Despite this, Mariko was said to have had head injuries and an abscess on her brain which may have contributed to the head trauma that killed her.
An annual memorial show was held in her honor from 1997 to 1998. Both JWP and Mayumi Ozaki's Oz Academy have held annual memorial shows since. Mariko was posthumously inducted into the All Japan Women's Hall of Fame on November 29, 1998.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Plum Mariko」の詳細全文を読む



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