History of the BJW Death Match Championship | Part 3 | The Neverending Kobayashi & Ito Arc

Home stretch. Let’s wrap this sucker up. Big Japan got the memo that wrestling belts can make you money if you have a nice one, so they gave Shuji Ishikawa a shiny, light tube themed strap. But his title reign couldn’t last forever, unfortunately. 

November 4, 2013 – Yokohama, Kanagawa

Isami Kodaka def. Shuji Ishikawa {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Cage Match}
From Death Vegas. Once they got the silliness out of their system in the first stretch of the match, things got considerably better. I wasn’t at all interested in seeing Kodaka fumble around with a giant antennae made of light tubes. I was interested in seeing Kodaka forced to hit headbutts from unconventional angles in order to gain control of his much larger opponent. He hit a superkick and two Isamuashi Zans for the win at 17:56. Kodaka held the title for six months and change before losing it to Ryuji Ito. Ito lost it to Yuko Miyamoto three weeks after that. ***¼ 

May 5, 2015 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Abdullah Kobayashi def. Yuko Miyamoto {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Endless Survivor. In 2013, Kobayashi began an extended break because he contracted Hepatitis C. I’m pretty flabbergasted that he got right back into matches where he’d bleed all over the place upon his return. Probably the case of a dude who thinks he doesn’t know how to make money doing anything else. Pretty sad. This is the third match I’ve watched now where a layer of cinderblocks is put down in the ring and it’s the dumbest possible addition to deathmatches I can think of. It doesn’t make a loud noise when guys are slammed on it, but it does add a lot of potential for unnecessary injury. Here, Miyamoto slams Kobayashi on the edge of the “palate” on the small of his back. Like, what the hell? That and a handful of early stupid light tube bits aside, this was built around the drama of whether or not Miyamoto would ever get dropped on a bed of nails that was in the ring. Kobayashi got abused by the nails multiple times in the match, but often tried to block slams onto it. That helped build the drama for the finish, which saw Miyamoto avoid the nails multiple times, until he could avoid it no more. He went back-first onto them and then Kobayashi rolled him over and put on a Boston Crab on top of the nails for the win at 20:56. Great finish to a surprisingly solid match. ***½ 

July 20, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

Ryuji Ito def. Abdullah Kobayashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Ryogokutan. I imagine this will be gross, as the last match between them I watched certainly was. This was a rare instance of this title going on before a Strong Championship main event. Kobayashi started things off by blading on camera in the first minute. Things got worse from there. Kobayashi broke out what was essentially a machete and they cut each other’s forehead with that. Think it’s gimmicked? Ito chopped up a cactus with it to show how sharp it was, and then used pieces of the cactus as a weapon. The cactus was pretty funny, the giant knife on the other hand was gratuitous. So much of the match was Kobayashi just standing there while Ito slowly stabbed and poked him with weapons. Then, they threw salt at each other in the same manner in which you might see two young children have a splash fight in a swimming pool. Then, Ito slammed Kobayashi onto a board covered in bug zappers. Of course, that would only hurt for a short second, because the second one zapper breaks they all break because they form an electrical circuit. This match is for dumb people. Seriously, these two bring out the most idiotic impulses in each other. One of the final unique weapons in this match was a handful of Flaming Hot Cheetos, which was meant to hurt in the same way as salt and lemon. Ito finished things off by jamming a syringe into the inside of Kobayashi’s cheek and then putting the match out of its misery with a Frog Splash at 21:10. The only thing that could have made this worse is if there’d been brawling on the floor. ½*

July 24, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Kankuro Hoshino def. Ryuji Ito {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Ryogokutan. They start fighting with a platform hanging over their heads, suspended between two ladders. I guess it’s technically a scaffold. A thing I hate that happens in this kind of wrestling a lot: a guy is incapacitated by a punch so much that lays on a table for over a minute while the guy who punched him walks a long way to get to higher ground so he can hit a splash on the punched guy, and then the damage from said splash is no-sold so the punched guy can walk back to the ring. I’m out on this match and it’s only three minutes in. The video quality on the last match wasn’t good enough for me to notice that the syringe went all the way through Kobayashi’s cheek and whatever was inside it was being squirted all over the place. It was good enough here for me to notice and I hated it. He wrestled the rest of the match with the needle through his cheek and the syringe hanging out of his gaping mouth. This gets a quarter star for each of the three scaffold spots, which took effort and guts and actually looked good. Hoshino hit a uranage on the scaffold, dropped Ito to the mat, and then hit a diving senton from the scaffold for the win at 20:31. ¾*

December 18, 2016 – Yokohama, Kanegawa 

Abdullah Kobayashi def. Kankuro Hoshino {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Death Vegas. I’d love more matches in this lineage that had neither Kobayashi or Ito in them, but I’ll have to wait longer for that. I was 37 years old when I started watching this match; I am now 103 years old. It was so slow. And after a while the match just turned into both guys haphazardly throwing things at each other and not selling any of it. Most of the match, Kobayashi just stood there and let Hoshino do stuff to him. Par for the course. Then, Hoshino did the same for Kobayashi near the end. It’s spreading. Kobayashi put on the Boston Crab for the win at 18:49. Total nonsense trash match. ½*

May 5, 2017 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Masaya Takahashi def. Abdullah Kobayashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Endless Survivor. Takahashi gives off serious just-a-guy energy. This was the exact same formula as a previous match, made slightly more tolerable because it moved a bit more swiftly and because rather than do nothing spots on top of cinder blocks, they built a bit of drama around a bed of nails. The finish even played off of the one Kobayashi match I like, against Miyamoto. Kobayashi went for the Boston Crab on the bed of nails, but Takahashi blocked it with light tube shots. Then, Takahashi tossed Kobayashi onto the bed of nails. Finally, hit hit a Jackhammer onto the corner of the bed of nails, though I’m sure he was supposed to drop Kobayashi onto it more fully. Either way, it got him the win at 19:26. *¾ 

August 19, 2017 – Nagoya, Aichi

Masashi Takeda def. Masaya Takahashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Death Mania V. This is the first of three matches in a row without either Kobayashi or Ito. I’m very excited. The match wasn’t a FREEDOMS-style barn burner, but it moved at the pace of a normal wrestling match at least. Takahashi took off his shirt, making him feel like more of a wrestler, but I regretted hoping for such a thing when he started bleeding a LOT from his neck. It just freaked me out the entire match despite him seeming quite calm about the whole ordeal. In the second half, they started doing actual wrestling moves as a way to build to their gore spots. That’s really all I ask of a match like this. Takeda hit the Reverse U Crash for the win at 14:08. ***¼ 

November 11, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Masaya Takahashi def. Masashi Takeda {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Ryogokutan. Takahashi had gotten a rematch a year earlier in a match that was very well-received. He failed to win the title there, but got redemption here. There was some wrestling in this match that I’d like to see someone rip off in a non-deathmatch environment. For example, Takeda hanging onto the turnbuckle to hit a rebound Spider Suplex was very cool, and I’d like to see that done even without the victim landing on a bunch of thumbtacks. Especially without the victim landing on a bunch of thumbtacks. Beyond the gore, of which there was plenty, these guys beat the crap out of each other. They also showed fear of the larger torture devices and tried to avoid them. Wrestlers doing what wrestlers would do to get an edge in a fight, who would have thought that could be satisfying to watch? In the end, their adrenaline started pumping and they both did a bit of self mutilation to make their faces as bloody as Eddie Guerrero’s at Judgment Day. Takahashi poured salt all over Takeda and hit a Jackhammer for the win at 19:38. ***½ 

May 5, 2019 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Isami Kodaka def. Masaya Takahashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Endless Survivor. Seeing Takahashi’s bloody back stain the mat over and over again started to feel like a gross joke after a while. I don’t have a ton to say about this one aside from that. It wasn’t just a weapon spam match, which is good, but the action didn’t grab my attention. Kodaka isn’t that engaging. There were various points in the match when the pace felt like it was about to kick up and things slowed down instead. Oh well. Kodaka hit the Isamuashi Zan for the win at 17:48. ***

December 18, 2019 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Abdullah Kobayashi def. Isami Kodaka {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 25th Anniversary Memorial: Super Star Warriors. The centerpiece of this match was a big ass cabinet full of light tubes. They both ran into it a few minutes in and it looked dumber than hell. And less than a minute later they were both fine. I was annoyed that it didn’t play into the finish, but then at least they both hit diving moves off the top of the thing. Kobayashi won the very slow match with a diving elbowdrop off of the cabinet at 15:23. *¼ 

March 16, 2020 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Ryuji Ito def. Abdullah Kobayashi {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 25th Anniversary: Stardust Superstars. I hate this pairing so much. I hate it infinity. Luckily, this wasn’t nearly as gross as their previous matches. It was billed as a 316 Lighttube Deathmatch, and it stayed focused on that. I am thankful. It was still slow and stupid, but it wasn’t offensive to my delicate sensibilities. I have only two notes. When they tried to do a lightsaber fight with illuminated tubes Kobayashi’s was defective, I giggled. I also wonder, are these guys getting their lungs and kidneys checked out frequently? They must inhale an insane amount of phosphor from all these broken bulbs. Even if it’s non-toxic, and I’m no expert about that, it’s still a crazy amount of non-oxygen material going into their lungs. Anyway, after a ton of lighttube shenanigans, Ito put a bunch of bulbs on Kobayashi’s stomach and hit a Frog Splash for the win at 17:13. **

August 29, 2020 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Minoru Fujita def. Ryuji Ito {BJW Death Match Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Last BUNTAI At BJW. This lineage was a marathon, not a sprint, and I’m very happy that I’ve reached the end. I’m sore, I’m tired, and I don’t want to do another long deathmatch lineage ever again. Please never have another title change, CZW. It looks like BJW never did empty arena shows during the pandemic. Anyway, this wasn’t like, a good match, but there were a few bits I enjoyed. The first was when everything started going wrong. Fujita tried to set up a little glass bridge to suplex Ito onto, but the glass broke in his hands. The look on Fujita’s face made me glad I watched the match. Ito struggling to quickly rehab the spot with light tubes instead and seeing those tumble all over the place was also funny. Fujita winning the match with a fluke roll up was something that I believe has never happened in a title switch in this lineage, but then I’ve skipped a bunch of the harder to find matches so who knows? The finish came at 17:27 and I breath a major sigh of relief that this lineage is covered. **¼ 

Compared to FREEDOMS, this deathmatch title is bad. It’s probably more fair to say that compared to most deathmatch titles, FREEDOMS is exceptional, but for now I just want to complain a bit about what I just sat through. It turns out it’s not just the Strong title that’s disappointing, the Death Match Championship has been an outright comedy belt in a lot of cases. Yikes, BJW, yikes.