History of the IWGP Championship | Part 4 | The King & The Ace

The title here is not to be confused with Ace & King, Hiroshi Tanahashi’s future tag team with Togi Makabe. This is Ace Tanahashi & King Nakamura. Ya dig? This is where things begin to pick up. After years of bad ideas from Antonio Inoki dragging the company down, he left to form the Inoki Genome Federation. Here we see New Japan under his son-in-law Simon for a short time, and then Naoki Sugabayashi’s tenure on top as the company begins to turn around. 

July 17, 2006 – Sapporo, Hokkaido

Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Giant Bernard {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Circuit 2006 Turbulence. This feels fresh. The crowd for this match is quite small, about 4,000 people filling a building about two-thirds. I guess it shouldn’t be surprising given who had more experience at this point, but Bernard actually looked more fluid and comfortable in the ring than Tanahashi did here. That said it’s not like they were crazy far apart in experience or age and I don’t think it’s controversial to say that Tanahashi has shown himself to be the far more talented of the two in the ring during his career. Maybe he was nervous given what was being put on his shoulders. He mostly got himself together, though the flying Sling Blade near the finish looked bad. I don’t know that the match needed the interference, bleeding Bernard (for like the last 15 seconds of the match), chair shot, or ref bump, but I guess it turned a David overcomes Goliath match into a David overcomes Goliath and his friend and a bunch of cheating match. Some of it was good. Tanahashi hit his millionth Sling Blade for the win at 17:44. **¾ 

April 13, 2007 – Osaka, Osaka

Yuji Nagata def. Hiroshi Tanahashi {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Circuit 2007 New Japan Brave. I wrote this review back when it happened (it’s 2020 now), back when I did a ton of play-by-play. But being that my goal is to review as many title changes for major championships as I can, I’m taking shortcuts where I can. I’m also not a fan of revisiting matches I’ve loved, as I’d like to remember them in high esteem. They knuckle up to start and Nagata powers Tanahashi to the corner. Nagata opens up with kicks but Tanahashi comes back with a leaping forearm. They knuckle up again and Nagata is still stronger. He goes for a cross armbreaker but Tanahashi and attempts the move himself. Nagata blocks and puts on a wristlock. Tanahashi hits a dropkick and Nagata bails. Back in the ring Nagata unloads with kicks and stomps. Tanahashi comes back with slaps but ends up getting slugged down. Nagata kills him with kicks and hits a big boot in the corner. He hits an armbreaker and then goes back to the kicks. He puts on an armbar and has the crowd reacting to all of his facial expressions. He puts on a cross armbreaker but Tanahashi gets to the ropes. Nagata tries to kick Tanahashi to the floor but Tanahashi grabs his leg and dragon screws it against the ropes. Tanahashi hits a neckbreaker on the floor and then rams Nagata’s leg against the post. Back in the ring he catches a Nagata kick and hits a capture suplex for 2. He puts on a figure 4 leglock but Nagata gets to the ropes. Tanahashi puts Nagata down with slaps and hits a dropkick in the corner. Nagata goes for the Nagata Lock but Tanahashi gets to the ropes. He hits a legsweep, and elbowdrop and a senton for 2. Nagata comes back with a knee strike in the corner. He sets Tanahashi up top and hits the second rope exploder. He hits the Shining Wizard for 2. I guess he isn’t going to be letting Tanahashi get up from that exploder anymore. He hits a pair of brainbusters for 2. Tanahashi counters a knee strike to a powerbomb for 2. He hits a neckbreaker and a T-bone suplex. He hits the Sling Blade for 2. He hits a dragon suplex and climbs the ropes. The High Fly Flow hits knees and Nagata rolls him up for 2. Tanahashi gets a roll up for 2. Nagata counters a Sling Blade attack to a backdrop driver. Tanahashi hits an enziguiri and a German suplex for 2. He hits another German suplex for 2. He goes back to the slaps and elbows but Nagata puts him down with a kick to the head. He hits a backdrop driver for 2. One more backdrop driver is too much for Tanahashi to handle and Nagata wins the belt at 23:33. This had a truly epic feel to it. Nagata was in control most of the match so any chance he got Tanahashi scrambled for a pin. About a million times better than Tanahashi’s TNA excursion. 2020 Brad thinks it’s hilarious that 2007 Brad thought Tanahashi’s time in TNA was worth mentioning here. ****¼ 

October 8, 2007 – Tokyo, Japan

Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Yuji Nagata {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Explosion. Tanahashi beat Nagata in the finals of the G1 to earn this shot. This is also from a 2007 review but I cut out the play-by-play because there’s so damn much of it and I hate that giant blob of text above. To see Tanahashi control Nagata the way he did early in this match was a great payoff to the entire series. I find fault with Nagata dominating the remainder of the match and neglecting to put anything into selling his leg in the middle portion of the thing, but neither of those problems took too much away from the drama of the entire production. The finish of the match was incredible too, bringing an end to this feud in admirable fashion. Tanahashi hit the High Fly Flow again for the win and the title at 31:06. ****½ 

January 4, 2008 – Tokyo, Japan

Shinsuke Nakamura def. Hiroshi Tanahashi {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Kingdom II. Yep, New Japan is now on PPV. Nakamura was such a nerd before his King of Strong Style persona. This took a while to get out of the gate and I was worried that after the match that preceded it this main event would go off without any fanfare. But about two-thirds through the match, Tanashi began to brutally attack Nakamura’s arm. Nakamura had a really hard time hitting the Landslide, so Tanahashi pretty much had his run of the match. But then Tanahashi got caught on the top rope, Nakamura hit an avalanche Landslide, and Tanahashi was too loopy to protect himself from a traditional one. That gave Nakamura the win at 23:08. Oh, and remember that belt that Lesnar took with him when he quit New Japan? Well even though NJPW stripped him of the title, Lesnar took the belt with him to IGF, Antonio Inoki’s new project, and dropped it to Kurt Angle there as their top belt called the IWGP 3rd Belt Championship. Just before Nakamura won the real IWGP title here, Angle defended his title against Nagata. Imagine if WWF had cooperated with WCW in 1992 to do the same thing. It would have been insane. One month later, Nakamura beat Angle and reunified the titles. A short time later, Nakamura was awarded an upgraded title belt, the one that we still see today. ***¾ 

In late April, Keiji Mutoh, who was now the president of All Japan, returned to NJPW and took the title from Nakamura. I’ve only ever seen clips of this match. Mutoh peppered Nakamura with Shining Wizards, but needed the moonsault to put the champ away. While IWGP Champion, he won the Triple Crown Championship as the Great Muta and became the second person to be the champion of both companies (after Satoshi Kojima, though Kojima didn’t defend them as different personas in each company like Mutoh did). 

January 4, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan

Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Keiji Mutoh {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Kingdom III. This was a really weird match. The beginning made me feel like I was watching one of those ‘90s main events that stayed on the mat forever for no reason. Tanahashi worked the leg here, but it was weird and unconvincing because Mutoh just laid around, not trying to fight back at all. It’s a testament to his legacy that he was made champion of both companies while putting in just a bit more effort than he had at his most unmotivated and it was considered some sort of workrate renaissance for him. Halfway into the match things began to get interesting with dueling dropkicks to the knee. Then, it turned into Tanahashi punching up as the less experienced mirror of Mutoh. Both were attacking the leg to soften up for the Figure 4 Leglock. Both used the hanging neckbreaker. Tanahashi met Mutoh’s Shining Wizard with the Sling Blade and the moonsault with the High Fly Flow. But while Tanahashi’s selling was so on point, Mutoh’s wasn’t at all. The guy just popped up at points when it made no sense to do so. Even within the context of the Japanese strong style no-selling style it made no sense to no-sell when he did. Again, Tanahashi tried hard but Mutoh was on a different planet. Tanahashi got the win with two High Fly Flows at 30:22. ***¼ 

May 6, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan

Manabu Nakanishi def. Hiroshi Tanahashi {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Dissidence. I totally forgot Nakanishi was ever the champion. There wasn’t a lot to this one. Nakanishi was big and bad. Tanahashi was quick and precise. Eventually, Nakanishi’s Iron Clow and brute strength won out. He powered through all of Tanahashi’s attacks and put an end to a leg assault to hit a pair of German suplexes for the win and the title at 21:42. On the bright side, they didn’t waste any of the time they had with directionless mat work. On the minus side, Nakanishi can only move so fast and his power set wasn’t the most mind-blowing here. ***

June 20, 2009 – Osaka, Osaka

Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Manabu Nakanishi {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Dominion. Is that Nakanishi at Starbucks I see? Because he had a cup of coffee with the title and that’s it. When I saw that this match was going to be ten minutes longer than the last one, my stomach turned over. I did not want to see an extended version of what I just saw. Luckily, that’s not what happened here. This had all the drama the previous match lacked. It also had Tanahashi sweating from intense effort that was absent from the Tokyo match. It also had a crowd that gave a damn about what happened. And they happened to be very invested in Nakanishi. Tanahashi hit two High Fly Flows for the win at 31:18. ****

A couple months later, Tanahashi’s face broke and he had to vacate the title. Nakamura and Togi Makabe met in the finals of the G1 Climax, which Makabe won, and fought in a rematch for the vacant title, which Nakamura won (and I can’t find). So then we get a rubber match, also for the title, like seven months later. This was after Nakamura had run through the returning Tanahashi, Yoshihiro Takayama (who had become the one of only two people to be the champion of All Japan, New Japan, and NOAH), former champs Nagata and Nakanishi, New Japan Cup winner Hirooki Goto, and ZERO1 President Shinjiro Ohtani.

May 3, 2010 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka

Togi Makabe def. Shinsuke Nakamura {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestling Dontaku. I didn’t get a lot out of this. Makabe worked the match like he had ants in his pants. He’d been elevated to the main event in a big way at this point, so you’d think he’d be a little more sure of himself in his crowning moment. Keep in mind I’ve never been a huge fan of his. He won with two King Kong Knees at 18:18. On the bright side, the floor for quality at this point was pretty high, but I’m itching for things to really pick up because it happens pretty soon. Makabe held the belt for five months (and beat Nakamura again to really cement that he won the feud) before losing it to Satoshi Kojima, who had returned to NJPW from AJPW and won the G1 Climax. I can’t find that match either. ***

January 4, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan

Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Satoshi Kojima {IWGP Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Kingdom V. This one is from a review I wrote in 2011. The same shortcut rule applies. I think it’s worth noting how creepy Tanahashi’s new t-shirts are. They lock up to start. Thy trade holds on the mat. Kojima hits a shoulder tackle. Tanahashi hits a dropkick to the shoulder. He zeroes in on the arm with a kneedrop. He puts on an armbar. He splashes the arm. He slams it against the mat repeatedly. He hits a crossbody. Kojima hits a dragon screw. He dropkicks the leg. He hangs it on the top rope and hits an uppercut to it. Tanahashi goes to the apron so Kojima goes to the floor and clotheslines his leg. He puts on a half crab but it’s useless on the floor. In the ring he puts on a Sharpshooter. Tanahashi gets to the ropes. Kojima hits a running elbow. He hits the Bakayaro Elbow for 2. He hits a roaring elbow. Tanahashi smacks him. He hits a leaping elbow. He hits a senton for 2. Kojima hits a DDT. He hits a neckbreaker. Tanahashi returns the favor. He hits dropkicks the arm. He hits a pair of armbreakers. Kojima hits the Koji Cutter. He hits an avalanche Koji Cutter for 2. Tanahashi gets a roll up for 2. He hits an arm-capture German suplex for 2. He hits a dragon screw for 2. He hits the High Fly Flow to the back. He goes for another but Kojima puts up his knees. Kojima hits a lariat to the back. Tanahashi hits the Sling Blade. He hits two Michinoku Drivers and the High Fly Flow for 2. Kojima hits a lariat on the apron. Tanahashi falls to the floor but Kojima doesn’t want him getting counted out. He pulls Tanahashi to the apron and brings him back inside with a brainbuster. It gets 2. Kojima hits a Frankensteiner. Tanahashi goes back to the arm. He hits arm screws. He ducks a pair of lariats but Kojima connects with a third. It gets 2. Kojima hits another lariat but his arm is too hurt to cover immediately and it only gets 2. Tanahashi ducks a lariat and hits a dragon suplex. He does it again for 2. He hits the Sling Blade. He hits a crossbody and the High Fly Flow for the win and the title at 21:57. I really liked that finish, as Tanahashi was able to hit the High Fly Flow from an angle he didn’t expect to have to use, and then hit it once more just to be sure. The second half of this match was quite good, and the finish was a great cap to it. ***¾ 

In the next and final part, New Japan get new bookers who change the way the company thinks about character, Kazuchika Okada returns home, and I take a look at all the matches that everyone has been fawning over for the last decade.