I’ve been very open about my aversion to death match wrestling. I also don’t like gory horror movies. This is why I reviewed the Big Japan Strong Championship rather than the more prominent Big Japan Deathmatch Championship. But after catching a couple of death matches incidentally while working my way through the IWA Mid-South Championship, I found my stomach for them a bit stronger than I thought. And since FREEDOMS’ top championship just changed hands (as of my writing this in July, 2021), it seems this hardcore company is my next natural step. Plus there are like one-fourth as many title changes to find and review here than there are for Big Japan, so I’m taking the easy way out.
Hardcore wrestling in Japan began thank to Atsushi Onita and Frontier Marshal Arts Wrestling. FMW gave way to World Entertainment Wrestling, which in turn gave way to Apache Pro. When Apache closed in 2009, it’s then-owner Takashi Sasaki started FREEDOMS. And with that context-free history lesson out of the way, we skip ahead four years to May 2, 2013 and Sasaki beating Tatsuhito Takaiwa in the finals of a tournament to make himself the company’s first champion. Actually, we skip even farther ahead than that because I can’t find that match anywhere.
May 2, 2014 – Tokyo, Japan
Yuji Hino def. Takashi Sasaki {King of FREEDOM World Championship Match}
FREEDOMS wasn’t naming their shows yet. Okay first things first, the Fucking Bomb is a crazy move. I’d ask why people in the States don’t steal it, but it’s obviously dangerous and really easy to screw up. But it makes me like Hino a lot. I’m impressed that Sasaki didn’t book himself like an unbeatable force despite being in charge. Hino kind of rolled him here, powerbombing the crap out of him at every turn and having an answer for almost all of the champ’s offense. Fun stuff. The Fucking Bomb won the match for Hino at 16:57. Jun Kasai won his first of many titles four months later by beating Hino, and then lost it to Masashi Takeda three months after that. ***¼
December 25, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Jun Kasai def. Masashi Takeda {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the fifth Blood X’Mas. The only thing death matchy about Hino’s title win was that he kicked a bandage off of Sasaki’s face and the champ bled. That’s not the case here at all. The match starts with panes of glass in each corner, and given the amount of scar tissue all over both guys I’m already terrified. The spots where they knocked each other into the panes of glass were pretty cool, but the parts where they rubbed bits of broken glass into each other’s faces were less cool. But what set this apart from American indie death matches I’ve seen (outside of like, Ring of Honor where they were done pretty well) was the actual wrestling match they put on between the glass spots. Rather than escalate violence for the sake of it, they tried to win the match between the stunts. That’s all I ask, truly. And speaking of stunts, Takeda hit Kasai with a Spider Suplex through a pane of glass draped over two chairs. What the actual hell? Kasai had smeared his forehead blood in the shape of a cross on the glass. This is insane. And speaking of insane, I have to keep reminding myself that all the suplexes they’re hitting on each other between the stunts are being done on pieces of broken glass. Who signs up for this?! My only complaint is that they repeated a spot when the final glass pane didn’t break the first time around. And while it looked cool (a flip through the glass into a cross armbreaker) when they did it successfully the second time, it didn’t lead to the finish so they probably should have just left well enough alone. Kasai got the win after a pair of Vertical Drop Reverse Tiger Drivers at 18:47. That’s a very fancy way of saying he hit the Jay Driller a couple times. If you can stomach the blood, I defy you to watch this and not be impressed with the speed and tenacity with which these two fought THROUGH GLASS. ****
I’m having a hard time pinning down exactly what happened, but on April 21, 2016, Kasai was on the losing end of a tag match with Sasaki against Daisuke Masaoka & Yuko Miyamoto. Perhaps as a result, Kasai vacated the title that night. On May 2, Kasai beat Masaoka to win back the vacant title.
July 13, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Violento Jack def. Jun Kasai {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the second Tokyo Death Match Carnival. The variety of weapons in this match border on silly. There are light tubes and cinder blocks, but there’s also a pineapple with scores of spikes sticking out of it. Cyber Kong would never. There’s also child’s model of the Tokyo Dome, under which are hundreds of spikes. They get stuck in Kasai’s back. At first, I thought the final weapon was a replica of the Twin Towers. Thankfully, for the sake of good taste and my desire to keep watching this company, it wasn’t that but rather just two large pieces of cardboard hiding other pieces of cardboard with nails and knives sticking out of them. Kasai splashes the nail board into Jack’s stomach and I get queasy. Both guys get dumped back-first onto the knives. Jack finishes things off by jamming a bunch of spikes into Kasai’s forehead, then hitting a frog splash, then hitting a DVD onto the nail board, then hitting a package piledriver onto the (non-gimmicked) cinder blocks at 17:31. This was a lot more focused on escalating weapons, which felt pretty silly after a while. Yes, the stunts made my teeth hurt, but the wrestling was kind of boring and nobody sold anything. Points for keeping it moving at a good pace, though. ***
December 26, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Daisuke Masaoka def. Violento Jack {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the sixth Blood X’Mas. There are glass panes in two corners and a scaffolding rig at ringside. Masaoka quickly introduces a bucket of thumbtacks to the match too. Somehow, they wrestle a huge chunk of the match on top of the tacks. I’m so happy the video quality wasn’t so pristine because those tacks were clearly sticking to them and I’m happy to register that as only tiny golden circles on their legs and backs. I’m kind of impressed. I’m also impressed with the dives off of the scaffold, but irritated that they only led to near falls. A 15-foot superfly splash? Two-count. A 15-foot Swanton Bomb? Two-count. A 15-foot Air Raid Crash through a pane of glass? Unforgivable two-count. Masaoka followed that up with a 15-foot Meteora for the win at 15:43. They really should have reversed those last two spots. The glass exploding would have made the perfect ending. Anyway, lots of points for guts and what must be non-functioning nervous systems. ***½
November 13, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan
Violento Jack def. Daisuke Masaoka {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the second Heel Don’t Think. Quite the interesting aesthetic here, as there’s no canvas on the mat to cover the wood beneath. And we’ve got panes of glass again. I found myself very distracted by the wooden slats constantly moving and requiring ring attendants to put them back. It reminded of that scene in Labyrinth when the unseen little creatures moved the tiles around so that Jennifer Connely’s lipstick arrows faced the wrong direction. I was surprised to see it was a bit of (probably unintended) foreshadowing, as Jack pulled a bunch of slats away, replaced them with a pane of glass, and hit a package piledriver into the gap. Then they did a bunch of insane spots into the gap. Jack regained the title by blocking a Meteora and hitting a powerbomb, then hitting a lariat, then hitting another package piledriver for the win at 21:00. They turned this into a gnarly braw by the end, and the way they utilized the insane setting was awesome. I’m blown away by how much I’m enjoying FREEDOMS. Six months later, Takeda beat Jack for the title in a non-death match. ****
December 25, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan
Jun Kasai def. Masashi Takeda {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the eighth Blood X’Mas, we’ve got the same headliner as we did three years earlier. I wonder if this will be as good. In the four corners we’ve got a pane of glass, a board covered in razor blades, a ladder, and a board covered in stuff I can’t even identify. I think maybe it’s plastic forks. Kasai jammed a bunch of wooden skewers into Takeda’s back and then hit the One Winged Angel. That one made me feel sick. A lot of this match made me feel sick, honestly. And yeah, it is plastic forks covering the board, and Kasai wins the match by dropping Takeda on them with the Stimulation piledriver at 19:37. The first half of the match was slowed down by the time it took to set up some of the spots, but the second half was balls to the wall survival and punishment. I prefer their match from 2015, but this was still pretty wild. ***¾
October 1, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan
Toru Sugiura def. Jun Kasai {King of FREEDOM World Championship Death Match}
From the 10th Anniversary Celebration. The ropes are lined with light tubes and there are panes of glass in the corners. The challenger’s name looks too much like Tom Segura, so I’m going to imagine that this is Tom wrestling here. This flowed very nicely. It helped that most of the weapons were set up for them already, but even when a board covered in knives fell off of the ladder it was attached to, they were able to adapt quickly and find another (still gross) use for it. I am just floored at how quickly this match moved. The only drawback was that it never really felt like Sugiura was on his way to winning until the final moment of the match. There, he elbowed a light tube into Kasai’s face for the win at 21:15. Pretty damn wild, and would have been the best match of this series had it been a bit less one-sided. Sugiura held the title all through the pandemic, including the three months the company took off in 2020. He only lost the title very recently, so recently in fact that as of my writing this the match is still a week away from airing. Make sure to check out my ongoing quarterly title change reviews to see what happened when he lost it. ****
Not long ago, a wrestler named Orin Veidt tweeted out his respect for non-death match wrestlers who are willing to do death matches “the right way,” and his hopes that those who do them just for clout would quit the business. I asked him what he meant by “the right way,” and the first thing he replied was that people treat them as wrestling matches all the same. I didn’t really register what he meant until now. The guys in FREEDOMS are not just reckless freaks using gore to get over. They’re good wrestlers who are able to fill a very perverse niche. This does not erase from my memory the scores of dreck death matches I’ve seen between guys who did them and didn’t have the skill to put on an entertaining match without the blood, but it does make me feel more open minded about death matches going forward. I’m still not going to try to tack down all the BJW Deathmatch Championship matches though.
From Diamond Ring Kensuke Office Changes. They emphasize that Nakajima beat Dragon Gate wrestler Kenichiro Arai
From Dynamite 131. This is a qualifying match for the Owen Hart Foundation tournament. Joe debuted at ROH Supercard of Honor, saving Jonathan Gresham from Jay Lethal (whose soul searching apparently led him to turn heel) & Sonjay Dutt after the main event. And now that ROH and AEW are the same thing, that seems worth mentioning. Caster’s pre-match rap was cute. This was real squashy, with Joe needing only two minutes to put Caster down with the Muscle Buster at 2:52. Lethal & Dutt pop up on the big screens and Lethal says he’d been trying to get a hold of Joe during his difficult soul searching time, and Joe never picked up. They have a present for Joe next week. N/A
From Dynamite 132. Jay Lethal & Sonjay Dutt were in the front row cheering on Joe. Sarcastically, probably, as they brawled with Joe at ROH Supercard of Honor XV.
From Rampage 39.
From Dynamite 137.
From Dynamite 138. This is a
From Double or Nothing.
From PWF York Cougar Football Fundraiser. I didn't know that this match happened until over a month after the fact. This started out as a non-title match, but we'll get to why I've listed it as a title match in a moment. FTR have Mick Foley in their corner while their opponents have Bill Behrens. I’ve never actually seen Behrens do an on-camera gig before. He's holding a tennis racket, presumably as an Umaga to Jim Cornette. But it's confusing because there was actually a tennis player named Bill Behrens. They announce this match as having a 20-minute time limit. Only 11 minutes in, they say there are three minutes remaining. Until then, this was as run-of-the-mill as a modern FTR match gets. But the announcement snapped everyone out of their heat-on-Wheeler funk and forced them to go for desperate pins. They announce ten seconds remaining a couple of times, but no one can get the roll up pin they're looking for. The 20-minute time limit expires at 1
From NXT UK 183. McGuinness started by essentially saying that Fraser is going to pee or poo himself during the match. Unnecessary. Had Shawn Michaels been game to have a good match against Vader, this is what it would have looked like. Actually, a more appropriate and modern analogue is Brock Lesnar vs. Seth Rollins from SummerSlam. Much like that match, Frazer used quick strikes and avoided his larger opponent’s signature big move to stay alive. Here it was the powerbomb whereas there it was suplexes. Here, Frazer also successfully damaged WALTER’s knee, which slowed the big man down and made it hard for WALTER to hit the powerbomb. Unfortunately for Frazer, WALTER was able to bide his time and clothesline Frazer’s legs out from under him. An inevitable powerbomb followed and won the match for WALTER at 14:02. I hate to say this because I’m happy that he’s healthier, but the way WALTER has slimmed down has taken some of the magic away from his aura. At least for me it has. That said, dude can clearly still go as well as ever in the ring. ****
From NXT 659. Strong was feeling it here, which is thanks in large part to the crowd being maniacally loud from the get go I’m sure. His whole game was fast and devastating stick and move attacks. That worked pretty well, as WALTER was dazed from time to time. But as with all good WALTER matches (which is pretty much all WALTER matches), everything WALTER does is devastating here so it takes very little for him to take back control. And eventually he did just that and hit the powerbomb for the win at 9:46 (shown of 12:18). After the match, WALTER gets on the microphone and says that his name is Gunther now. I did not think WALTER would be a victim of the renaming curse this far into his run. What will they rename Strong?! ***¾
From NXT UK 185. Andy Shepherd helpfully announces from inside the ring that the reason for the stipulation is that the feud has gotten so violent that it wouldn’t be safe to have fans around. Devlin says during the match that it’s because he thinks Dragunov could only muster the energy to win if he had the crowd behind him. I like that explanation a lot more. The only real reason I could think of to do this without fans is that there was a scheduling conflict with one of the wrestlers for the regular TV taping date and they needed to get this thing filmed. We just had such a long stretch of empty arena NXT UK episodes that I can’t imagine anyone was dying to get another taste of it. This aired the day after Adam Cole vs. Orange Cassidy in a match that was also no disqualification and falls count anywhere, and this served up everything I felt was missing from that match. Now you might say, “Brad, Cassidy is not the same kind of character as Devlin or Dragunov, how could you expect the same level of violence or intensity?” To that I say, when Cassidy started his match by breaking his own sunglasses and rapidly punching Cole, he was indicating that level of violence and/or intensity. And instead the match was mostly wacky. Anyway, this was not wacky. It was stiff and intense and featured weapons that made sense and spots the didn’t take forever to set up. Dragunov got in trouble when his eye injury acted up. Devlin took control and beat the crap out of him. I wasn’t wild about how meek Dragunov was when Devlin was zip tying his hands, but I did like that in the end it turned out to be an error on Devlin’s part anyway because Dragunov’s finisher requires no hands. And indeed, a bound Dragunov jumped off the steel steps (which had been brought into the ring) and hit the Torpedo Moskau on Devlin for the win at 21:43. NXT UK is still sneaking in these dope matches that no one is watching. Y’all should watch them. ****¼
From AAA Triplemania Regia. FTR come out with Vickie Guerrero. This was supposed to be explained at an earlier AAA taping but FTR and Guerrero all missed them. AAA is notorious for having this kind of luck/being incompetent lately. FTR is also wearing Eddie Guerrero tribute tights, with American flags on one side and flames on the other, I suppose to pay homage to his Gringos Locos and Latino Heat gimmicks. This match mostly sucked, but one cool spot saw FTR tie Pentagon’s mask to the ropes and force him to unmask with his hands over his face to stop them from climbing the ladder. That would have been a very meaningful moment to lead up to the Lucha Brothers winning the titles back, but unfortunately instead it led into nothing. He just got his mask back and the match continued on in its lame, derivative way. At one point, Pentagon was the only man standing, but instead of climbing the ladder he grabbed a table from the floor. So the titles mean enough to him that he’d unmask to stop his opponents from winning, but not enough for him to get the titles when he had a clear path to do it? Vickie powered Pentagon, causing him to voluntarily jump through the table and Harwood grabbed the belts at 12:12. This was abysmal. *
From AEW Full Gear. Silver was hamming it up a lot more here than he was the year before in New York. That said, this had stronger just-a-match vibes than the aforementioned match. After Silver ripped out Cassidy’s pockets, Cassidy turned up the heat and these guys put on a middle of the row undercard match. Not bad by any means, but nothing memorable either. Cassidy hit the Beach Break rather out of nowhere for the win at 9:42. **¾
From the second Honor Reigns Supreme. The commentators sold this as Gresham getting a big shot against a top ROH guy after being an also-ran in the Television Championship division for a while. This was terrific. Both guys did a fantastic job selling their respective targeted limbs, and Gresham in particular played the role of the tenacious underdog perfectly. He didn’t just watch to see where Lethal would have trouble executing his finisher because of the damage he’d done to the former ROH Champion’s arm, he pressed the assault whenever he could, taking out the arm to make sure the Lethal Injection would never come. But what he couldn’t do was stop Lethal from battering his knee and ultimately winning with a Figure 4 Leglock at 17:54. ****¼
From the second Masters of the Craft. Columbus has way more Gresham fans than Concord did. That’s a neat little advancement to the plot, innit? They both went after the same limbs that earned them dividends in their previous match. And then they went ahead and built an incredible match out of that story. At first it seemed as though Lethal wasn’t going to be able to get Gresham’s leg to give out. But about halfway through the match, Gresham’s knee was in trouble. Gresham was able to escape the leglock this time by using the momentum of Lethal pulling him away from the ropes to shift to an armbar. But Gresham’s focus on the arm bit him in the ass. Lethal went for the Lethal Injection and collapsed again, but when Gresham went for a roll up after that Lethal cut back on it for the win at 18:27. This is one of the best American examples that I've seen of a match building on the match that came before. Rather than try to outdo the maneuvers from their first meeting for the sake of a big crowd reaction, they adjust their game plans in logical ways that, to me, were just as exciting. I think this match is slept on, by virtue of the fact that I’ve never heard anything about it before watching it. ****½
From ROH Wrestling 364. In real life,
From Death Before Dishonor XVII. Gresham and Lethal had been teaming, but Gresham grew frustrated and started heeling. Ultimately, he turned on Lethal. It took them a little while to get there, but once they got into a groove this was exactly what I wanted from this match. It was back to their old tricks, with Lethal targeting the leg to set up for the Figure 4 Leglock and Gresham targeting the arm to block the Lethal Injection and set up for his Octopus. In the end, Lethal tried the cutback trick that worked for him in Columbus, but Gresham countered to a pin and then put on the gnarliest Octopus for his first win over Lethal at 17:20. This is the best kind of wrestling series. And none of it felt stale because it was a year after they’d wrestled last and because they found ways to energize the old tropes. And that’s not to mention Gresham busting out what I can only describe as a sumo-style assault. Gresham and Lethal make up after the match. ****
From ROH Wrestling 500. During the pandemic, ROH made the most of their empty arena shows by kicking them off with a tournament to crown a champion for the revived Pure Championship. Gresham won the tournament, and this was his fourth defense of the title. Lethal and Gresham were still allies here. In an interesting move, the other match on this milestone episode was two other partners fighting in Jay and Mark Briscoe. They cut to a commercial break about six minutes in, though the action didn’t get beyond (admittedly fast-moving) mat wrestling until the 10-minute mark. That had me thinking this was going to go long, but things took a different turn. Both guys had abused the other’s shoulders, and Lethal used that to his advantage best. He forced Gresham to use his first rope break to stop a pin, and his second to escape a crab. Then, he used the failed Lethal Injection to bait Gresham into a crossface, forcing the champ to use his final rope break. But he made the mistake of giving Gresham a breather and was quickly caught in a head scissor takedown giving Gresham the winning pin at 14:06 (shown of 16:40). For an empty arena match, this held my attention. It was totally different than their previous matches while still using a couple elements from the rivalry to elevate it just a bit. Not essential viewing, but if you’re working your way through their series you shouldn’t skip it. ***¼ 


