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Wakamatsu began his pro wrestling career at 31 years old in 1973 for International Wrestling Enterprise where he worked there until the promotion folded in 1981.
On September 2, 2023, Wakamatsu became the oldest male wrestler to fight at 81 years old, 244 days; he wrestled in two events that day for Asian Pro Wrestling in Yubetsu, Japan. In the first match, he defeated Animal Warrior and Agu in a three-way bout, and the second match was for a battle royal won by Agu.[12]
^ abMeltzer, Dave (February 8, 1993). "Death of Andre the Giant, life and times, huge bio". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Andre's last run as a babyface came under a hood as Giant Machine. About one year earlier in Japan, as a gimmick that was largely decried and considered unsuccessful, manager Ichimasa Wakamatsu brought in Andre as The Giant Machine and teamed him with Super Machine (Bill Eadie) and Strong Machine (Junji Hirata, who still uses that name in New Japan) as the Machine Gun Army.
^ abKrugman, Michael (2009). Andre the Giant: A Legendary Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 110. ISBN978-1-4391-8813-2.
^Meltzer, Dave (2004). Tributes II: Remembering More of the World's Greatest Professional Wrestlers. Champaign, Illinois: Sports Publishing LLC. p. 79. ISBN1582618178.
^Apter, Bill (January 1986). "Names Makin' News". Inside Wrestling. Rockville Centre, New York: G.C. London Publishing Corp. p. 15. A shocking result from Japan: Giant Machine, who is Andre the Giant in a Strong Machine mask and is managed by the hated manager Wakamatsu, scored a pinfall victory over Antonio Inoki! According to one published report, this is the first pinfall loss Inoki has suffered in nearly seven years!