History of the KO-D Championship | Part 1 | All HARASHIMA, All the Time

With this corner of my Championship History series, I’m trying a little experiment. In 2017, Japanese company Cyber Agent purchased DDT Pro Wrestling. They clearly got something out of the wrestling company because in 2020 they purchased Pro Wrestling NOAH as well. The two companies became separate brands of an entity known as CyberFight. CyberFight would presumably hold supershows that featured the wrestlers and championships of both brands, as well as DDT’s women’s brand Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestling, but to date hasn’t done that because of the COVID-19 pandemic. As such, I’m going to review the history of the DDT KO-D Openweight Championship, the NOAH GHC Heavyweight Championship, and the Tokyo Joshi Pro Princess of Princesses Championship contemporaneously. I don’t think it’s going to inform anything extra about this title, and I assume it won’t be all that noticeable to the reader (so why am I mentioning it here?). But NOAH has always seemed so serious to me and DDT so goofy, so I feel like this will at least help break up the tone. DDT’s title came into being a year before NOAH’s, but footage of title changes from the first three years are hard to come by. Anyway, here we go. 

In the mid-’90s there was a Japanese company called Pro Wrestling Crusaders. Years before Mitsuharu Misawa ever dreamed of taking a crew from All Japan to form Pro Wrestling NOAH, Sanshiro Takagi, Nosawa Rongai, and MIKAMI all bailed on PWC to form the Dramatic Dream Team promotion. DDT was founded as a spoof of pro wrestling. They ran shows for three years before creating a governing body. New Japan has the IWGP, All Japan has the PWF, NOAH would later have the GHC, and DDT created the King of DDT, or KO-D.

Between 2000, when Masao Orihara beat Takagi to become the first champion, and 2003, when the first title change that has been posted to DDT Universe happened, the title changed hands 14 times. Like most wrestling streaming services, DDT Universe is spotty when it comes to the early days of the company. 

A quick rundown: 

  • Orihara lost to Koichiro Kimura
  • Kimura lost to Poison Sawada Julie
  • Julie lost to Takagi in a four way match
  • Takagi lost to Exciting Yoshida
  • Yoshida lost to NOSAWA in a three way match
    • NOSAWA was stripped of the title for some shady business and left the company for five years.
  • Kimura put on a mask and became Super Uchuu Power to beat Takagi and Julie in a three way match for the vacant title
  • MIKAMI and Takashi Sasaki (KO-D tag champs) beat Power and KO-D Ironman Heavymetalweight Champion Asian Cougar in a winner take all tag team match in which MIKAMI got the winning pin
  • MIKAMI lost the title back to Power
  • Power lost to Takagi
  • Takagi lost to Kintaro Kanemura
  • Kanemura lost the title back to Takagi
  • Takagi lost to GENTARO
  • GENTARO lost to MIKAMI
  • MIKAMI lost to Takashi Sasaki
  • Sasaki lost to Shoichi Ichimiya in a Chain Death Match
  • Ichimiya lost to Julie in a four way match
  • Julie lost to MIKAMI
  • MIKAMI lost to Fracesco Togo
  • Togo lost to Takagi. And now we’re all caught up.

October 23, 2005 – Tokyo, Japan

Danshoku Dino def. Sanshiro Takagi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Day Dream Believer. Considering I associate DDT with Dino more than with anyone else , this seems like an appropriate place to start. If you’re not aware of Takagi, his entire gimmick is that he’s Stone Cold Steve Austin. Not an Austin parody, just Austin straight up. But Japanese. You’re probably more familiar with Dino, whose whole gimmick is that he’s gay. It’s the original Goldust gimmick played out about as far as you can take it and allow children in the building. The first half of the match was mindless brawling as an excuse to throw Dino into the crowd so he could molest the fans. Some of it is really funny. There’s no selling or story in this match. Sometimes Dino’s entourage helps him cheat. Sometimes Dino uses his penis or Takagi’s penis to his advantage (it’s actually incorporated pretty naturally). The funniest bit was when Dino’s boys tried to distract the referee so they could attack Takagi, but the referee was too apathetic to look away. That was some high quality vaudeville. There was a lot of finisher stealing and tweaking, like Dino hitting a penis stunner and Takagi hitting a Danshoku Driver. Dino hit three Danshoku Drivers and a True Raw Danshoku Driver for the win at 17:31. I watched this right after watching Misawa vs. Kenta Kobashi ‘03 for the first time and the juxtaposition is jarring to say the least. If you can handle straight up comedy wrestling for the company’s top prize, you’ll have fun with this. ***

December 29, 2006 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Toru Owashi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Never Mind. Owashi beat Dino back in April on a show that isn’t on DDT Universe. This match wasn’t funny at all! But it was pretty good. The best analogue I can think of is that this was an approximation of an early ‘00s American indie main event between a never-made-it-big brutish veteran and a popular indie darling who didn’t quite have all the tools yet. Think Eddie Kingston vs. Spanky. It had all the staples of that era, like brawling around the building, table spots, and then a focus on high-impact in-ring work. There was a nice little recurring story wherein HARASHIMA kept failing to hit the Yama-Ori because Owashi was too big. But a few well placed maneuvers and he was able to hit it and then finish Owashi off with the Somato at 18:04. ***½ 

October 21, 2007 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Koo {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Day Dream Believer. Koo (Shuji Ishikawa in a mask and a Hawaiian gimmick) had beaten HARASHIMA for the title in June. This was long and bad. Koo was definitely not good enough to be in this position. Or rather, if this was another company, Koo wouldn’t be good enough to be in this position. But either way he dragged this thing way down. He moved around the ring as though he was scared to be in there. It’s hard for me to believe that this guy became good later on, but I know he did because I’ve seen it for myself. HARASHIMA put this match out of its misery with the Somato at 19:54. *¼ 

May 6, 2008 – Tokyo, Japan

Dick Togo def. HARASHIMA, Sanshiro Takagi, Seiya Morohashi, and Yoshiaki Yago {KO-D Openweight Championship Elimination Match}
From Max Bump. Oh shit, two matches in a row! Koo took out HARASHIMA early on and handcuffed him outside of the ring, turning this into a tag match between Togo & Morohashi (Metal Vampire, what a cool stable name) against Takagi & Yago. Metal Vampire’s evil heel referee takes out the regular referee and small woman Megumi Grace, and then does a fast count for Morohashi over Yago and then immediately over Takagi as well. Antonio Honda tried to save the day, but failed. The referee tried to fast count Harashima, but he was too quick for it. But then All Japan referee Kyohei Wada comes out to take out the Metal Vampire referee and count the pin for HARASHIMA over Morohashi. From there, Togo and HARASHIMA have a normal, though not very good match. The crowd just isn’t interested in anything without shenanigans. A few minutes later, Togo won fair and square with a Senton Bomb at 22:38. This was a lot of dumb fun. ***¼ 

May 4, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Sanshiro Takagi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. Takagi beat Togo in a Steel Cage Death Match in September and I can’t say I’m not curious what that looked like. But it’s not on DDT Universe so I’ll just go fuck myself. This could have used a little Steel Cage Death Match flare. It was long and boring and performed in front of a silent crowd. It’s hard to understand why these guys didn’t have an understanding of what their fans wanted to see in main events. Neither of these guys is even bad in the ring, but the match was just twenty minutes of dull back and forth with no peaks or valleys. HARASHIMA hit three Somato’s for the win at 21:41. **

Over in NOAH things were getting tragic, as Misawa died and Jun Akiyama had to vacate the GHC Heavyweight Championship due to injury. Head on over there to see what was going on in NOAH all this time. 

August 23, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan

Kota Ibushi def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan. Surely an Ibushi match can’t be dull and heatless, right? Well, it can be heatless at least. I don’t understand why 8,000 people would show up to sit quietly through a main event. The referee is the evil Metal Vampire ref, so I’m assuming that group is done by this point. There was some actual hard work that went into this match, though it wasn’t strung together well at all. The last couple minutes finally got the crowd excited, but it took Ibushi throwing crazy palm strikes to do it. He hit the Phoenix Plex for the win at 25:29. That move is nuts. ***

November 29, 2009 – Tokyo, Japan

Shuji Ishikawa def. Kota Ibushi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From DDT Special. We’re two years post Koo, so hopefully Ishikawa has improved by now. Yep, he has, and this match sure makes it seem like the problem to this point has been HARASHIMA not being over. This ruled my whole ass. They worked so hard and sweat so much that at times you could see their reflection when they were near the mat. This is the kind of match that used to fuel my love for indie wrestling. The action was nonstop and crazy fast. You hear all the time that when these guys get to the big leagues, they’re told by the agents and trainers there to slow things down. It’s good advice because pacing things more slowly builds more drama. But every once in a while it’s so much fun to watch guys beat the shit out of each other at a wicked pace while doing things you’ve never seen before. Like here, Ibushi kicked Ishikawa’s head off, anticipated that Ishikawa would kick out so he jumped up prematurely and kicked him again. I loved it! Ishikawa answered Ibushi’s insane offensive flurries with brute force. He hit a cross-armed Splash Mountain for the win at 21:40. ****¼ 

July 25, 2010 – Tokyo Japan

HARASHIMA def. Daisuke Sekimoto {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan. In the bummer of the century, Sekimoto’s title win over Ishikawa happened in Union Pro. Union was an indie company that DDT supported for a decade from ‘05-’15. But they don’t carry Union shows on DDT Universe and frankly I’ve never seen a Union show or even really knew Union was a thing before yesterday. This match was good, but felt rather try-hard. In the same way that FTR, Kenny Omega, and Adam Page tried to force a huge-match-feel recently, this went the same route. It wasn’t bad, in fact it was good, but the fans weren’t buying it. HARASHIMA’s arm work on Sekimoto was kind of boring, though it made the match more interesting later because it gave HARASHIMA an answer to Sekimoto’s force. It was certainly a better main event than the year before, but it could have stood to lose five minutes and some of the repetition. HARASHIMA won at 22:24 with a springboard Meteora. ***½ 

November 14, 2010 – Osaka, Osaka

Hikaru Sato def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Osaka Bay Blues. I don’t know how many more of these HARASHIMA main events I can handle. The work is competent, sometimes good, and in this case quite good. But the crowds just don’t get behind the matches at all. Sato was the grappling and kicking underdog here, Kind of like a Japanese Davey Richards who you want to punch out less. Anyway, I just wish they’d stick guys on top that the DDT fans want to cheer for. Luckily, that’s the last HARASHIMA match for this stretch. Sato won at 21:27 with a cross armbreaker. ***½ 

December 26, 2010 – Tokyo, Japan

Antonio Honda def. GENTARO {KO-D Openweight Interim Championship Match}
From Never Mind. Togo had defeated Sato for the title a month earlier in another match that’s nowhere to be found. Togo was getting ready to retire (a two-year process, and then he came out of retirement four years later), and got injured (I think), so this was to crown a champion while they figured out what to do. This took a while to get going, but once it did it turned into a stiff and intense contest. Honda won with an Octopus Stretch at 25:10. I’ve never seen a match end with that move. I know it’s one of Honda’s finishers, but it’s been used by countless people and I’ve never seen Honda win a singles match before. So yeah, a solid match that set the stage for a unification match in January. ***¼ 

Next time, Honda and Togo unify the titles and we get a little reprieve from all the HARASHIMA matches.