History of the KO-D Championship | Part 3 | More HARASHIMA, All the Time

After playing around with foreigners on top, DDT moved the title onto HARASHIMA again and had him win and lose it over and over again for what feels like forever. The first time he loses it is to KUDO at Judgement in March. I’d review the match, but the version of it on DDT Universe is all glitched out and stops three minutes short of the finish. It seemed to be a rather standard KO-D Championship match up to that point, so unless the final three minutes were the best final three minutes of a match ever, I don’t feel like I missed all that much. Also, HARASHIMA won the title back from him, so I’ll just start with that review. 

May 25, 2014 – Nagoya, Aichi

HARASHIMA def. KUDO {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Friendship, Effort, Victory! This was all shown from the hard cam angle. The first few minutes were so silent it was like a parody of a Japanese wrestling crowd. The rest of the match was basically a toned down version of their match in Tokyo, but with a finish I could actually see. HARASHIMA hit the Somato at 23:13 for the win. I’m not sure what people were getting out of these matches. Yeah they’re fine, but they’re not exciting and I don’t really get what the point of giving KUDO only a two-month reign if the point was for the former champ to get the belt back. ***

February 15, 2015 – Saitama, Saitama

Kota Ibushi def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Saitama Super DDT. This was a pretty big show by DDT standards. This definitely had a bit more flare, a bit more verve, a bit more zhuzh than their match in ‘09. This had the silly dive on the ramp, and it also had a more exciting final stretch. I also have to give them a lot of credit, because the finish was rather complicated but they pulled it off without making it looking like HARASHIMA was cooperating with Ibushi. Ibushi caught HARASHIMA going for a springboard Somato, punched him a couple times, and then hit him with the Phoenix Plex for the win at 22:44. I liked that enough to watch them go at it again, which is fortunate because that happened. ***½ 

April 29, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Kota Ibushi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. I almost want to rate this lower because these guys didn’t have this match the first two times they wrestled. In one sense it wouldn’t have been possible, as a lot of this match played to what they’d each learned from the previous matches. I loved the way that these two worked their way through spots that required precise positioning while making it look natural. At no point did Ibushi or HARASHIMA ever feed the other guy their arm or leg or hold onto the ropes to stay in a position. That’s really difficult, made evident by how often you see wrestlers at the highest level blatantly cooperating. HARASHIMA had an answer for the Phoenix Plex from every angle. Ibushi was mostly in the same boat when it came to the Somato. But after HARASHIMA hit him with a Ganso Bomb, the champ was loopy and fell to a springboard Somato at 25:54. All that plus the opening mat work was engaging and hard fought, the middle striking portion was wild, and Ibushi’s brown outs were really compelling. ****½ 

May 31, 2015 – Tokyo Japan

KUDO def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Audience. This again. Much like he did in the Max Bump Ibushi match, HARASHIMA cut out a large chunk of the early portion of the match because DDT fans don’t care about the slow stuff. But where I praised him so much in the Ibushi matches for making everything look more real, here he hung himself in the ropes so that KUDO could hit his hanging double stomp. Blah. That said, I don’t have any other complaints about this match. It was stiff as hell and moved very quickly. HARASHIMA got a couple of funny dirtbag heel moments in, which is cute as the top guy in the company. One such moment involved his go-to closed fists to the face, which he had to briefly stop to appease the referee before going right back to it. But KUDO just kept on avoiding the Somato and kicking HARASHIMA to the mat until he was prone enough for the diving double knee drop at 23:27. ****

Most of Max Bump (the show on which HARASHIMA beat Ibushi) and most of King of DDT in June are not on DDT Universe, so what I’m about to say is based on educated guessing thanks to what I could find in a quick internet search. At Max Bump, Ken Ohka and Yasu Urano won Money in the Bank ripoff contracts for title shots. Urano challenged his former stablemate KUDO for the title at King of DDT in a match that nobody expected him to win. In the middle of the match, Ohka cashed in his contract as well to make it a three way. He won the match and the title by pinning Urano. But then KUDO won the title back moments later anyway because he also had a MITB ripoff contract, so the whole thing was kind of moot. I had thought he used that contract to get the match with HARASHIMA in the first place, but I guess not. 

August 23, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan

Yukio Sakaguchi def. KUDO {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan. Sakaguchi won the King of DDT tournament to get this shot. Sakaguchi, the Gooch, has an awesome look. He’s basically the prototype for every action movie villain henchman. I liked this match, though it was pretty one-dimensional. Grapps then kicks is all you get here. If you’re into that, you’ll probably dig this. I found it kind of repetitive, but hard work was clearly on display. Sakaguchi hit the Kami no Miga Hiza (God’s Elegant Knee? I think that’s right) for the win at 21:20. ***¼ 

November 28, 2015 – Osaka, Osaka

Isami Kodaka def. Yukio Sakaguchi {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Osaka Octopus. A while back, DDT brought a group called Union Pro Wrestling under its umbrella. In 2015, Union Pro dissolved and a few of its wrestlers formed Pro Wrestling Basara under the DDT umbrella. Kodaka was pretty much the top guy there, and he won an election to earn this title shot. I’m pretty sure I have that right. Kodaka came into this match as the Union MAX Champion, the top prize in both Union and Basara, though I think the title was technically inactive at this point. Dammit, I’m realizing I might as well review that title while I have the DDT Universe subscription. This was pretty similar to the Gooch’s title win. It was filled with stiff strikes, but it didn’t have much in the way of peaking drama or tantalizing near falls. Isami won in 18:05 with the Isami-ashi Zan, though it could have happened at many moments before that given there was hardly a run up to the finish. **¾ 

March 21, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Isami Kodaka {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Judgement: DDT’s 19th Anniversary Show. This was a lot of fun and went by in a flash. It helps to have watched HARASHIMA’s matches against Ibushi to appreciate this one, though it isn’t necessary. The bonus is that you see Kodaka exploit HARASHIMA’s vulnerability when he’s going for his springboard Somato in the same way that Ibushi successfully did. Beyond that, this is kicks and counters done so quickly that I had to rewind a couple times to make sure I registered everything that happened. HARASHIMA hit the springboard Somato for the win at 18:15. ***¾ 

April 24, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Daisuke Sasaki def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. HARASHIMA had just defended the title against Kazusada Higuchi. Sasaki’s partner Shuji Ishikawa cleared the ring of HARASHIMA’s crew and Sasaki cashed in his MITB ripoff contract (which he’d won off of Antonio Honda in a tag match). HARASHIMA put up a noble fight, but he was exhausted and fell to the Crossover Facelock at 1:45. **

May 29, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Konosuke Takeshita def. Daisuke Sasaki {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Audience. I’m not sure if it’s connected to why he got the title shot, but this was Takeshita’s 21st birthday. Far and away the best part of this match was when Sasaki forced Takeshita to bump the referee, then hit a low blow on Takeshita, then hit a low blow on the referee, then pulled in a second referee and bodyslammed him. From there they had a pretty standard indie strong style escalation finish. I liked it, mostly because Takeshita’s final comeback got the crowd all hot and bothered. He hit a straight jacket suplex for the win at 24:42. Between the cheating and the dope second half, this delivered enough. I was worried because Takeshita’s gimmick seemed to be that he kept it basic, but that turned out to not quite be the case. Apparently this feud reignites a couple years later, so it’s good that I didn’t hate this match. ***½ 

AUgust 28, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan

Shuji Ishikawa def. Konosuke Takeshita {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan: Most Hot Summer in the World. Ishikawa won the King of DDT tournament to get this chance at revenge for his buddy Sasaki. Right off the bat, Ishikawa hit a powerbomb onto the apron and Takeshita’s head smacked the ring so hard that I nearly swallowed my tongue. This match was sick. Takeshita had to pull out every counter and quick trick to gain the advantage on Ishikawa, and every time that happened Ishikawa would just casually hit a backbreaker to regain control. Had Takeshita sold his back, or had any trouble hitting his many suplexes, I would have liked this even more. But he didn’t so it’s just a fun smash-em-up and not a mind-blowing epic. Ishikawa hit the Giant Killer for the win at 20:05. ***¾ 

December 4, 2016 – Osaka, Osaka

HARASHIMA def. Shuji Ishikawa {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Osaka Octopus. I’m going into this feeling pretty confident that this will be a lot better than their abysmal match a decade earlier. And it certainly was better than that match, but damn the first five minutes were meaningless and heatless. And from there the match didn’t become awe inspiring at any point. It wasn’t boring and painful like their ‘07 match, but it never got into a groove. I’m surprised, as both of these guys were quite good at this point in their careers. I guess they just don’t have great chemistry. HARASHIMA hit the springboard Somato at 20:08. ***

March 20, 2017 – Saitama, Saitama

Konosuke Takeshita def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Judgement: DDT’s 20th Anniversary Show. We’re back to having commentary have a good long while without any. I can see where folks might like this match, but for most of it I felt as though I was watching the action go at three-quarter speed. It also felt like they were struggling to get through some of the more intricate sequences they’d planned. That’s not even mentioning that, like his back in the Ishikawa match, Takeshita just didn’t sell the leg injury they set up in this. Down the stretch he sold his neck for a little bit, which led to a couple cool moments, but then his neck was totally fine to hit the bridge on his many suplexes. That’s including the straight jacket suplex he hit to win the title at 31:28. This was just too long and didn’t quite do good by the promises it seemed to be making. ***

Takeshita went on to hold the belt for over a year. Things were definitely improved in this batch of matches from the last, and I was able to cast off my HARASHIMA hatred. Now I just need to get in the headspace to get comfortable with a lot of Sasaki and Takeshita for the next and final bunch of KO-D title matches.