History of the Ice Ribbon Championship | Part 2 | xInfinity

After unifying the IW19 and ICEx60 Championships in Ice Ribbon, now-four-time champion Tsukasa Fujimoto reigned over a division with no weight classes and a renamed title: the ICExInfinity Championship. The time limit for matches was increased from 20 to 30 minutes, though the rule that a time limit reached in a match would result in the title becoming vacant remained. Fujimoto was already the winningest champion by far, as no one else had ever won the title more than twice. And as of the match I’m about to review, she also claimed the longest title reign at 20 months. She’s a real John Cena type around these parts, as we’ll see.

March 21, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

Kurumi def. Tsukasa Fujimoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 635: Ice Ribbon March. Kurumi bucks the trend of super skinny women holding the title, which I think was a smart way to go after Fujimoto’s big reign. Kurumi isn’t huge, but every champion up until this point aside from Emi Sakura (who went through a weight loss angle to challenge for the title) has been very small. I don’t claim to know what goes into planning a main event wrestling match, but this looked hell of a lot like Fujimoto doing just about all of the work and leaving small spaces open for Kurumi to hit power moves and strikes once in a while. It worked, but the seams showed some. The finish was neat, seeing Kurumi swat away the Sankakugeri and hit a Superfly Splash and a Swanton Bomb for the win at 19:28. During her reign, she started going by her full name. ***¼ 

June 24, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

Aoi Kizuki def. Hiragi Kurumi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 658: 9th Anniversary in Korakuen Hall. I make it a point to never really talk about how attractive I think female wrestlers are because I can’t imagine anyone cares what I think about that but Kizuki is flat out distractingly hot. I was able to focus enough to be more impressed with Kurumi here, especially as she did things like no-sell crossbodies and generally act like a bully. Kizuki’s clotheslines looked like crap, and I don’t quite buy that  such a small person would be successful in matching Kurumi’s strength and ferocity as much as she was here. That said, Kurumi’s frustrated comebacks were awesome. Kizuki picked up the win with a 450 Splash at 13:59. Curious that they still haven’t had a title match go over twenty minutes (I checked for every defense by Fujimoto and Kurumi) even two years since the rules changed. ***½ 

December 31, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

Homuko Hoshi def. Aoi Kizuki {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 700: RibbonMania. This started off gimmicky in a way that I found boring. Kizuki grabbed Hoshi by her gut, and then Hoshi basically armdragged her wither gut. Think Joey Ryan’s moves with his penis. Yawns all around. This is the main event of their biggest show of the year; get out of here with that amateur crap. Comedy can be done well in important matches (see Eddie Guerrero vs. Kurt Angle for an example), but this was undercard stuff. Hoshi is basically the fat woman version of Danshoku Dino’s gay guy character. All of her offense is contrived to accentuate that feature. It’s one-note. Needless to say, this fell flat for me. Hoshi hit a bunch of lariats, some of which looked awful, for the win at 10:33. **

March 21, 2016 – Hiroshima, Hiroshima

Risa Sera def. Homuko Hoshi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 716: Hiroshima Ribbon. Why would Sera grab onto Hoshi’s gut knowing what Hoshi can do with it? What is Sera even trying to do by grabbing it?! I hate this gimmick. This was a foot better than Hoshi’s title win thanks to Sera mostly knowing what she was doing and breaking out a few interesting bits of offense and thanks to Hoshi cutting the bullshit after the first few minutes of the match. Sera did botch a Falcon Arrow and then immediately repeat it in a very weird moment, mostly notable because it led directly to the finish where she hit a diving double knee drop for the win at 13:08. **½ 

July 3, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Tsukasa Fujimoto def. Risa Sera {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 735: Summer Jumbo Ribbon. Fujimoto wins lol. Just kidding she’s fun. So fun in fact that she put on the best title change that Ice Ribbon had ever had to that point. These two did the opposite of what Hoshi was doing in title matches. This was all serious business and it was the business of beating the crap out of each other. I could have done with a little more selling, but that doesn’t seem to be a thing when it comes to Ice Ribbon’s style. After a real war, Fujimoto hit the Sankakugeri for the win at 18:06. ****

November 3, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Tsukasa Fujimoto draw. Tsukushi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 765. I think it’s fascinating that for over three years there wasn’t a single title match that exceed twenty minutes despite a thirty-minute time limit for matches until this one, which goes the full distance to thirty. As a result, Fujimoto was stripped of the title. This is a rematch of the title unification match from 2013, a match I quite liked. I can’t say that they did anything that blatantly padded for time, but at times it did feel like they broke out whatever they could think of because there was a lot of time to fill. For example, Tsukushi at one point spent a couple minutes missile dropkicking Fujimoto from every corner. Perhaps a better production team could have made that feel like it belonged, but as this match was shown only from the hard camera it was irritating to see Fujimoto stand up and walk unprompted into place to take the dropkicks over and over. And then they did the same spot with the roles reversed. I have to imagine that entire bit is on the cutting room floor in a shorter match. I was also surprised that the announcement that 20 minutes had passed was met with no reaction. Perhaps Ice Ribbon wasn’t really pushing the fact that no title match had ever gone that long. On the other hand, the 25-minute announcement was met with panic from the crowd and the wrestlers. I like that. The finish was pretty sick, as both women dropped huge bombs on each other and the time limit expired during the count after Fujimoto hit the Sankakugeri. The last five minutes bailed this out from being pretty mediocre, but it still wasn’t as good as the unification match. ***¼ 

December 31, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Risa Sera def. Tsukasa Fujimoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 775: RibbonMania. This was the finals of a big ol’ tournament to crown a new champion. Of note is that both women wrestled in the semifinal rounds earlier in the evening and Fujimoto beat Tsukushi in around 13 minutes. So that monkey was off her back. This didn’t hold a candle to their match from July. There were times here when it seemed like both women were confused about what they were meant to do. The finish was intense, but required Fujimoto blatantly to crawl across the ring to get into place. Sera hit her with a Spiral Bomb, a Meteora, and three diving double kneedrops for the win at 17:41. Forced epicness, but at least it got the crowd riled up. ***

December 31, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan

Hiragi Kurumi def. Risa Sera {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 858: RibbonMania. Sera walked into this match as an Ice Ribbon tag champ as well as ICExInfinity Champ. I liked this a lot. Sera mostly had Kurumi figured out throughout the match, keeping her from building up momentum and using her size as an advantage by keeping her at bay with big strikes. Kurumi slowly but surely solved the puzzle of Sera blocking her over and over and took control after avoiding a diving double knee. From there she hit a package piledriver, a German suplex, and a Swanton Bomb for the win at 13:33. ***¾ 

March 25, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Miyako Matsumoto def. Hiragi Kurumi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 874: Ice Ribbon March. Matsumoto tried to flex her cute taunts early on, but Kurumi was having none of it and just slaughtered her. Matsumoto had to totally recalibrate and bring a similar aggression to get on even ground with the champion. Kurumi stayed in control for most of the match regardless, but a butterfly superplex and good presence of mind (and place in space) gave Kurumi a chance to win near the end. After escaping and taking a powder on the floor for a second to stop Kurumi’s momentum, Matsumoto caught her with a Gannosuke Clutch for the win at 19:28. The only bit of this I actively disliked was when Matsumoto did her cornerwoman Hoshi’s rolling press. It looks dumb when Hoshi does it and even dumber when the much smaller Matsumoto does it. ***½ 

May 13, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Hamuko Hoshi def. Miyako Matsumoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 884: Ryogoku KFC Ribbon. I shouldn’t have complained about the Hoshi move in the last match, maybe history rewrote itself to punish me karmically by giving her the title again. However, this was pretty interesting as the two most gimmicky champions in the company’s history threw off the shackles of their characters and just threw down. Still, Hoshi just isn’t great and I don’t understand why she’s consistently on the top of this promotion. I’d be happy for someone to explain it to me. This was fine as these two had fought many times before, but I’ll no doubt forget it ever happened in a few hours. Hoshi won with the Superfly Splash at 12:24. **¾ 

June 16, 2018 – Osaka, Osaka

Tsukasa Fujimoto def. Hamuko Hoshi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 891: Osaka Ribbon II. Save us, Tsukasa Cena. The back nine of this match was mostly fine, but holy crap were bits of the finish and the entire first half annoying. The whole opening of the match was Hoshi’s shticky garbage. Then during the finish she helpfully walked out of her way in a manner that made no sense to get into place for Fujimoto’s Sankakugeri. She kicked out of that, but then Fujimoto hit her with an Electric Chair Drop for the win at 18:36. I’ll live peacefully if I never have to watch another Hoshi main event. **

December 31, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Maya Yukihi def. Tsukasa Fujimoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 930: RibbonMania. They were going for epic, but for me they came up just a little bit short. That said, Yukihi does things that I wish wrestlers in the United States would steal. I mean that especially about her running knee variation, where she uses her opponent’s shoulder as a fulcrum to launch her feet up and get downward momentum on the strike. That was very cool. This had great action, but was also marred a bit by a goof near the finish. Yukihi hit a Swanton Bomb for the win at 23:50. ***½ 

August 3, 2019 – Osaka, Osaka

Maya Yukihi draw. Tsukasa Fujimoto {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
Ice Ribbon 974: Osaka Ribbon III. This is the most highly regarded match in Ice Ribbon’s history if I’m not mistaken. It’s certainly good. It never felt like it was padded to get to thirty minutes, which isn’t surprising given that Yukihi’s title win was longer than most ICExInfinity title matches. All of the big move kickouts felt earned, as did Fujimoto’s desperation near the end. And I really liked that the match ended just as Fujimoto was hitting the Electric Chair Drop. My only issue with the match are that Yukihi wasn’t scrambling to get a pin at the end, given that she knew if the time limit expired she’d have to vacate the title. I also don’t love the lack of long term selling, and that’s an issue that keeps me from getting more emotionally invested in all ICExInfinity matches. Anyway, if this is the top of the heap then it’s a solid one but not a resounding endorsement to watch Ice Ribbon over say Sendai Girls, SEAdLINNNG, or Stardom. ****

September 14, 2019 – Yokohama, Kanagawa

Maya Yukihi def. Risa Sera {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 992: Yokohama Bunka Gymnasium III. The finals of a tournament to crown the new champion. Finally, a show that’s not just from the hard camera POV with commentary from after the fact. So the production helped me get more into this. And there was more exhaustion selling, which is something I’d have loved to see in a lot of the other Ice Ribbon matches I’ve reviewed. This was another solid main event, unsurprising given who was involved. Yukihi won with a rather ugly Swanton Bomb at 24:53. ***½ 

August 9, 2020 – Yokohama, Kanagawa

Suzu Suzuki def. Maya Yukihi {ICExInfinity Championship Match}
From Ice Ribbon 1,057: Yokohama Bunka Gymnasium Final. Suzuki is a little nutcase and I appreciate the variation in personality. So we’re pretty deep into pandemic territory here and they’ve completely packed this venue. They’d run shows for a couple of months with no fans but got right back to attended shows pretty quickly. Granted everyone in the audience has a mask on but is it any surprise that Japan keeps having new waves of COVID in 2021? I know that a lot of that has to do with bad vaccine buy in there, but packed shows filled with unvaxxed people are packed shows filled with unvaxxed people regardless of the cause. Anyway, Suzuki’s fire elevated this, as did her double German suplex finisher, which had a sort of Chaos Theory transition. Sort of. You’ll just have to watch this to understand. She hit it at 23:29 for the win. ***¾ 

Suzuki finished out the year as champion, and since all my title timelines end at the end of 2020, that’s all she wrote for now.