I Dream of a Black Arrow

For 365 days beginning October 2, 2017, Benjamin Satterley wrestled zero times. After walking out on WWE (reportedly) because of his frustrations with his place in the company, the former Adrian Neville’s contract was frozen and he was not permitted to wrestle anywhere else. In August of 2018 it was reported that Satterley would soon be returning to the ring, and speculation heating up about where he’d make his new wrestling home. Most fans looked to Japan, where he had been just before signing with WWE. Though he was popular on the British and American independent scene, it was Dragon Gate in Japan where he really came into his own wrestling as PAC. Even still, it was thought that as a former WWE wrestler he was now too popular for Dragon Gate (which was going through a difficult time with a change in management and a few top stars defecting earlier in the year) and would end up in the larger New Japan. 

It turned out that PACs heart was in Dragon Gate, as he returned to the company the day after the anniversary of his WWE walk-out. Still using the heel persona he had honed in WWE, he aligned with the heel R.E.D. stable and made it clear that he wanted his top spot in the company back. He helped R.E.D. teams go nearly undefeated during the Gate of Victory tour, except for one loss to the Tribe Vanguard team. At the Gate of Destiny, PAC had his first singles match against Tribe Vanguard’s Flamita. 

November 4, 2018 – Osaka, Osaka

PAC def. Flamita
PAC won in 17:45 with the Black Arrow (the Red Arrow, now being called by its more heelish non-WWE name, after formerly being known as British Airways). Because I’d taken a few years off from watching Dragon Gate, I’m not so familiar with Flamita outside of a fun match he had with Susumu Yokosuka. If this match is any indication, I don’t need to search out much more. Seventeen minutes felt like quite a bit longer as there was a ton of inaction, and they were never able to get the crowd invested. There were a few interesting spots, mostly scary looking head-drops, and a cute finish wherein Flamita missed a dive and PAC immediately followed up with his finisher to get a quick comeback win. You don’t see errors quickly capitalized upon for wins, so I dug seeing that here. Nothing else in the match was really worth seeking out. **¾ 

Later that night, Masato Yoshino successfully defended his Open the Dream Gate Championship against PAC’s teammate Ben-K. After the match, PAC and Yoshino sized each other up, so a match between the two became inevitable. It happened one month later at the opening night of the Fantastic Gate tour. 

December 4, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

PAC def. Masato Yoshino {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
PAC won in 20:33 with the Black Arrow. Before Dream Gate matches, everyone stands for the national anthems of both competitors. While Kimiko played without issue, PAC attacked Yoshino during God Save the Queen in a move that I’m pretty sure was unprecedented. Just a side note, when Ricochet held the Dream Gate title and the Star Spangled Banner played before his matches, I was surprised as I assumed the tradition was just to play Japan’s anthem. Anyhow, the match that followed PAC’s attack was stellar. It was crazy fast, and basically the final stretch of most big Dragon Gate matches but for twenty minutes. There were near-falls I was buying even though I knew how the match ended. That’s a pretty wild trick. I especially liked that near the end of the match, when speed clearly wasn’t working for either guy, they decided to get more physical with lariats and suplexes. Good storytelling and good action helped to show that PAC was serious and the Flamita match was a bit of a dark fluke. ****¼ 

Rather than defend his title at Final Gate, PAC decided to spend the Christmas season at home. In his absence, Kzy rebounded from a Triangle Gate loss at Final Gate to get the winning pin in the main event of the last show of 2018. Three days after the anniversary of his failed but lauded (by everyone but me) previous Dream Gate match, Kzy challenged PAC for the belt during the Truth Gate tour. 

February 10, 2019 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka

PAC def. Kzy {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
PAC won in 25:17 with the Black Arrow. I was skeptical of the hype this match received because I was less impressed with Kzy’s match against Masaaki Mochizuki than most. In this case I was wrong to be skeptical because these two tore the house down. Whereas Kzy’s plucky babyface shtick coming up just short against a wily veteran didn’t do it for me, his same shtick going up against PAC’s bastard heel routine totally worked. PAC also allowed Kzy to shine more than Mochizuki did, to the point that the crowd was buying all of the kid’s near-falls (ignore that he and PAC are the same age). PAC also had to use a new world-beater finisher, an avalanche tombstone piledriver leading into the Black Arrow, to beat him. That’s how you build a main eventer in defeat. ****¼ 

After the match, Shun Skywalker came to the ring to challenge PAC. PAC’s teammate Eita tried to scare Skywalker off, but PAC called him off and said he was impressed by Skywalker’s bravery and would give him the title shot. The match was scheduled for a month later at Champion Gate. Skywalker had been in young-boy mode until pretty recently, so getting this title shot was skin to the rookie year titles shots the Shingo Takagi and BxB Hulk got in 2005 and 2006, respectively (Also Cyber Kong in 2008 but you need an exception to prove the rule). Ben-K got a similar push in 2018, and Skywalker pinned him in at Korakuen Hall a few days before challenging for the Dream Gate. That’s probably all a sign of big things for the guy if injuries don’t get in the way. 

March 3, 2019 – Osaka, Osaka

PAC def. Shun Skywalker {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
PAC won in 18:30 with the Black Arrow. This was a pretty interesting match, as had the general structure of PAC’s match against Flamita, but better energy and thus a more engaged crowd. It was also a bit more one-sided, with PAC bullying Skywalker for the entire first half of the match until the masked man caught him with a bicycle kick to turn the tide. Skywalker’s offense is flashy and fun, and it stands to reason that he’ll be able to tighten it up a bit as he gets more experience. This didn’t have the epic feel of PAC’s last two matches, but then Skywalker isn’t really on Kzy’s level, let alone Yoshino’s. ***½ 

Skywalker’s partner and mentor Mochizuki comforted him after the match. If Dragon Gate were an American wrestling company, former champ Mochizuki would likely challenge PAC next. But this is Japan, where more often than not the next challenger is someone random. And thus PAC named his own challenger on Twitter, a match against someone he considered a non-challenge, Dragon Kid. These two actually had a stronger one-on-one history than most Dragon Gate pairs. Kid was 4-3 over PAC going into this, as the two had traded wins over the wXw Lightweight Championship, while PAC had shut Kid out in their matches for the Brave Gate title, and Kid had defeated PAC in the 2011 King of Gate tournament. 

May 6, 2019 – Nagoya, Aichi

PAC def. Dragon Kid {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
PAC won in 21:55 with the Black Arrow. This was the first time I’ve seen Kid looking his age. The 43-year-old was moving quite a bit more slowly than in years past, and because of that never felt like much of a threat here. Rather than getting convincing near-falls, the drama in this match came from Kid kicking out of PAC’s mega-moves, like a nasty top rope Michinoku Driver. In the end, PAC put the veteran down with an avalanche tombstone piledriver before hitting the Black Arrow. The crowd too never got behind Kid, as it turned out that he was indeed not too much of a challenge for the champion. PAC, hardly sweating or breathing hard after the match, taunted Kid before leaving. ***½ 

And that brings us to Kobe World Hall, home of Dragon Gate’s biggest show every year. In 2019 year the marquee attraction was Ultimo Dragon wrestling his first ever match in his namesake promotion, 15 years after leaving his students, and teaming with Masato Yoshino & Dragon Kid against an Aagan Iisou nostalgia team. But in the main event, King of Gate winner and relatively freshly turned babyface Ben-K cashed in on his prize by challenging his former leader PAC for the Open the Dream Gate Championship. 

July 21. 2019 – Kobe, Hyogo

Ben-K def. PAC {Open the Dream Gate Championship Match}
Ben-K hit two spears and two Ben-K Bombs to put PAC down and take his title at 26:31. PAC feigned attacking Ben-K during God Save the Queen here, which to me telegraphed that he was losing because it bookended the attack on Yoshino before the match wherein he won the title. His loss was also telegraphed because the heel basically never wins in the main event on this show. Larry Dallas did English commentary for this show and it’s just garbage. Rich Brennan is better, but not much. It’s a shame because the match deserved a better set of narrators. Ben-K spent the whole bout trying to match PAC’s intensity. PAC embarrassed him with consecutive shotgun dropkicks, so Ben-K fired back in kind. PAC and his R.E.D. cronies set Ben-K up to be hit with a chair-assisted Black Arrow on the floor, so Ben-K came back with a spear from the apron to the concrete. PAC dominated with strikes, so Ben-K got wise and caught one before getting a few near-falls with German and dragon suplexes. R.E.D. attacked Ben-K throughout the match on the floor, so when the referee got bumped and they attacked in the ring, Ben-K took them all out on his own. What I especially liked about was Shun Skywalker (Ben-K’s second) staying out of it and letting the challenger fight his demons on his own. ****¼ 

With Shingo Takagi’s departure (and all the attention paid to his run in NJPW), PAC was the perfect person to carry the company through this transitional phase. He brought stability and notoriety to the title scene, protected the belt while working in other companies, dominated his challengers, and then put over the future top guy in the company in a huge way. That’s how you do it.