It’s 2011 in DDT and Dick Togo and Antonio Honda are both laying claim to the KO-D Openweight Championship. Nothing left to do but see how that plays out. I’m sort of abandoning watching this alongside my NOAH GHC Championship reviews because this title changes hands so much more frequently than that one does. It was a fun experiment to start though.
January 30, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan
Dick Togo def. Antonio Honda {KO-D Openweight Championship Unification Match}
From Sweet Dreams! I’ve seen people lavish a lot of praise onto this match, but I don’t see it. It was too long by a lot. It rarely got the crowd going. Honda’s arm works segment went on forever. Togo’s selling comes and goes (though when he is doing it, the one-armed Pedigree he hits is pretty cool). And Honda’s bleeding isn’t capitalized on in a way that makes the match more dramatic. The match is solid, but I’ll never have the urge to watch it again. Togo hit a Pedigree and the Senton Bomb at 26:24 for the win. ***¼
May 4, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan
Shuji Ishikawa def. Dick Togo {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. Ishikawa, now a Big Japan wrestler as well, has scars all over his back. Or maybe it’s dirt. Hartd to tell. This was tough and ugly. Spots were botched. Gnarly bumps were taken. Ishikawa is almost ten inches taller than Togo, making some of this match look kind of ridiculous. Ishikawa seemed to get fully out of gas by the twenty minute mark, barely holding it together. Togo did a solid job of getting Ishikawa where he needed to be when he needed to be there, but this match was long and it was often frustrating to see it need to be saved time and time again. Togo got really aggressive toward the end, which was more fun to watch than Ishikawa having his way with him, which is what most of the match was. I liked that Togo avoided the Splash Mountain throughout the match so that when he eventually kicked out of one it was a big deal. But then Ishikawa hit a cross-armed version for the win at 31:18. This had its merits, but for Ishikawa’s sake it should have been ten minutes shorter. ***
July 24, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan
KUDO def. Shuji Ishikawa {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
Peter Pan. Okay, I think I just don’t like the style of DDT main events. Whereas a lot of Japanese main events start with a feeling out process, DDT’s spend all but the last five minutes doing not a feeling out process but a slow and disjointed match that doesn’t connect with the crowd. KUDO won the King of DDT tournament to earn this shot. I feel like a broken record, but this could have been shorter. In the end, it was cool to see KUDO take all of the much larger Ishikawa’s offense and then fight back and tear the big man down. But that came after a lot of solid but unspectacular wrestling and a stint where KUDO frankly looked bored. KUDO hit three diving double kneedrops for the win at 27:24. ***¼
January 29, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Danshoku Dino def. KUDO {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Sweet Dreams! These two had been teaming, so I’m not clear on how they got to this match. On the one hand, this was a tired old Dino match, where he did the same gay panic stuff he always does with little in the way of innovation. It looked like it might be interesting with KUDO giving it back to him, but that didn’t go anywhere. I guess one innovation for me was we actually saw Dino’s butthole, but I certainly didn’t need that. The last couple of minutes were interesting, with both guys actually wrestling. Dino won with a cradle Donshoku Driver, two moonsaults and a Phoenix Splash at 15:37. I guess if you’ve never seen a Dino match this was an alright place to start, but it was pretty uninspiring otherwise. **¾
April 1, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Sanshiro Takagi def. Danshoku Dino {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From April Fool. Takagi came out to his same Steve Austin entrance song, but he had a whole CM Punk tattoos and wrist tape thing going on here. There was some actual pro wrestling through a lot of this match, but the requisite dick touching and spanking was present as well. Maybe it’s because the Punk homage didn’t go anywhere, but I felt this didn’t live up to its full potential. Still, I liked it more than their match from ‘05. It’s kind of incredible that Dino’s gimmick stayed relevant in DDT for so very long. Takagi hit the Himawari Bomb for the win at 19:17. ***¼
Masa Takanashi def. Sanshiro Takagi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
Takanashi attacked Takagi right after his win and used the Right To Challenge Anytime, Anywhere (Money in the Bank Ripoff) Contract that he’d won earlier in the night in a battle royal ladder match deal to get a title shot. I say he won because he grabbed a contract by climbing a ladder, but then he didn’t win the match and just left after getting his piece of paper. I don’t understand the rules of that match. But this match, for a two-minute match, they packed a ton into this. The whole thing was counters and blocks of huge moves. Pretty sweet. Takanashi won at 2:04 with the Taka Tonic. **½
May 4, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Yuji Hino def. Masa Takanashi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. Hino had actually won the battle royal thing I mentioned in the last match, so I assume that’s why he got this shot. HARASHIMA (who had just won a number one contender match) was watching the match from the timekeepers table, which sent a shiver down my spine. At 9:01, after a whole lotta nothing happened, Takanashi and his cohort convinced the referee that Hino had used the title belt and got him disqualified. The ruse only lasted a minute and the match was restarted. And what a gem it turned out to be! I wouldn’t have thought that the underdog heel vs. the unstoppable babyface would be compelling in a long match, but this worked very well. Takahashi tried cheating like crazy and wanted to get disqualified so he could retain the title. But when it became clear the officials in attendance beyond the referee would put their fingers on the scale, Takanashi had to get more creative. That came in the form of cheating to pin rather than just cheating to win, and trying his best to chip away at Hino’s unbreakable facade. I expected nothing going into this and wound up having a blast with it. Hino hit the Fucking Bomb for the win at 26:10 (including the original 9:01). ****
June 24, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Kota Ibushi def. Yuji Hino {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From What Are You Doing?! I’m not sure what Ibushi did to earn this shot, as Hino had actually beaten him for the KO-D Tag Titles shortly after winning the Openweight Title. This was most fun when Hino stopped selling near the end. Unbreakable Hino is my favorite Hino. The rest of the match was pretty good, but never great. Some of it was exciting, some of it was sloppy. I like that both guys suffered when they got cocky. Mixed bag, but not at all bad. Ibushi won at 21:12 with the Phoenix Plex. ***¼
September 30, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
El Generico def. Kota Ibushi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Who’s Gonna Top? Generico beat Ibushi at Max Bump, so this makes sense. Ibushi won the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship during this reign, so he has that belt here too. He was coming off of a really highly-regarded match against Kenny Omega at Peter Pan the month before. I’d be curious to watch that one day because this, while good, didn’t light my ass on fire. Both guys did the things that both guys do, and that’s neat, but I don’t need ten minutes of low impact stuff to build to each guy just playing their hits with no other nuances involved. Generico hit the BRAINBUSTAHH! at 23:33 for the win. ***½
December 23, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Kenny Omega def. El Generico {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Never Mind. Omega won a Double Ring Five Way TLC match two weeks before this, which should be enough to rationalize this title match. I believe this is the first and only match for a Japanese top championship between two Canadians. I could be wrong, but that feels right. This had everything I was hoping for out of Generico’s title win. These two are friends and they want to have a friendly contest. But as the match goes on, their tempers start to flare and things get out of control. Later, it becomes a matter of desperately trying to avoid each other’s finishers. Generico hits an apron brainbuster (for 2) but can’t hit it on the turnbuckle, so he hits Omega with his own One Winged Angel. Omega kicks out of that. Generico eventually hits the BRAINBUSTAHH!, but Omega kicks out of that too. Generico freaks out, but both men know that the next move will put Omega down. So Omega summons all his strength and pops up to surprise Generico with a sudden One Winged Angel for the win at 24:01. Great stuff from tops to bots here. ****½
March 20, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
Shigehiro Irie def. Kenny Omega {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Judgement. Irie won a one-night, four-man tournament to earn this shot. Irie is basically what a bully on Nickelodeon would look like if Nickelodeon had a show about pro wrestling in 1991. It took them a good long while to get to a point where it felt like Irie had any chance in hell of winning this thing. My mind was starting to drift because it was feeling like a long ass squash. But then the last chunk of the match was hot in Topeka. Irie shrugged off whatever knee issues were ailing him and went back to the one and only move that was giving him an advantage: his headbutt. He finished of Omega with the Back Flip Samoan Drop at 24:29. ***½
August 18, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
HARASHIMA def. Shigehiro Irie {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan. DDT moved its programming to Samurai TV and expanded it. They also updated their logo to something a little more corporate looking. Very ‘90s, but corporate looking nonetheless. HARASHIMA won the King of DDT Tournament to get this shot. I mean, of course he did; that’s how you get the shot at Peter Pan. The effort was certainly here, even if the crowd wasn’t until the last few minutes. I’ll never understand how HARASHIMA was so heavily pushed despite not getting DDT fans to cheer. Anyway, the match was all well and fine, though it felt a little flat as the main event of the biggest show of the year. HARASHIMA won in 23:30 with the springboard Somato. After the match, HARASHIMA is congratulated by most of the roster as he walks backstage. He finds Irie crying, asks for a handshake, and then the whole roster celebrates with a group photo and an energy drink fight. ***¼
And with that, we’re ushered into another era of HARASHIMA. I can’t say I’m looking forward to seeing how few crowds cheer for him as he wins and loses the title over and over again.