History of the KO-D Championship | Part 4 | In the Endo

If you don’t count WWE’s rebooting of each title, the KO-D Openweight Championship has changed hands almost as many times as the WCW and ECW Championship (and will surpass that number before all is said and done). That is to say, I feel like I’ve been watching DDT title changes forever, and it’s time to put this baby to bed. DDT had just put all their eggs in the Konosuke Takeshita basket, having him run with the title for over a year. He was super young and pretty good for his age (though had some tendencies that made watching his longer matches kind of annoying), so there were worse ways they could go. But nothing lasts forever. 

April 29, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Shigehiro Irie def. Konosuke Takeshita {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Max Bump. This was the first show that DDT ran with their current logo. There’s an English commentary track for this show, but it’s rightfully called an English recap. That is to say, the commentators are rather monotone, not getting caught up in the action and just explaining things for English speaking fans. It’s helpful, but it does pull from the emotion of the match. Also the sound quality is bad. But you don’t have to turn it on. Irie died his hair black (it’s usually very colorful) because he hates what DDT has become (more serious, I’m guessing) and needs to win the title to break the company. Irie was so different here than he was in the matches I reviewed of his from 2013. Everything he did here was so precise and powerful. If Dave Mastiff could hit his cannonball the way Irie did here, by fiercely whipping himself into Takeshita, I’d be way more stoked for Mastiff matches. Irie hit the Beast Bomber for the win at 18:17. Oh, I almost forgot to mention the sidewinder senton he hit. What an insane move! This match was very hard hitting. It was a blast. ****

August 1, 2018 – Dayton, Ohio

Sami Callihan def. Shigehiro Irie and Trey Miguel {KO-D Openweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Rockstar Pro Amped 233 show. This was basically the inverse of Harley Race going over to All Japan to trade the NWA title back and forth with Giant Baba. Rockstar is the Crist brothers’ company, though you’d have to imagine that after the Speaking Out movement of 2020 that Dave Crist has distanced himself. There were enough goofy spots to get me through this without tuning out, but most of the match was two guys fighting while the other guy waited on the floor until it was time for him to break up a pin. Callihan caught Irie with a backslide for the win at 11:47. This title reign in particular feels like a dumb one to do this kind of switch on, because Irie was meant to be this monster that came back to dominate DDT. I guess this probably got everyone involved some press, but it felt desperate. **¾ 

August 8, 2018 – Dayton, Ohio

Shigehiro Irie def. Sami Callihan {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Rockstar Pro Amped 234. It’s kind of wild that an indie would put on a weekly show. Drawing a crowd that consistently is impressive. This was better than the last match thanks to a stronger focus. It was a bit of a bummer not to have Miguel bouncing around all over the place because that’s a lot of fun, but they came out net positive without him. In particular, the spot in which Callihan threw Irie into the crowd was cool, as was watching Irie beat the hell out of Callihan in general. Irie hit the Beast Bomber to end this blip of a title reign at 16:05. ***¼ 

August 14, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Danshoku Dino def. Shigehiro Irie {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Maji Manji 14. Maji Manji was a bi-weekly show that DDT ran in 2018. It felt quite similar to NWA Powerrr in that it was in front of a very small crowd (not as small as Powerrr, but small by the standards set by DDT at the time). Irie had just won a main event tag match against Mad Paulie & Shuji Ishikawa when Meiko Satomura came out to challenge him with her Right to Challenge Anytime Anywhere Gauntlet. Dino came out with his own Gauntlet and attacked Irie before the Satomura match could happen. Irie tried to put up a fight, but he was tired and Dino caught him with a Gedo Clutch for the win at 1:37. *¾ 

August 28, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Meiko Satomura def. Danshoku Dino {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Maji Manji 15. I guess if you’re a growing Japanese wrestling company with a strong comedy background that wants to have a woman as champion, this is the right way to get to it. Satomura patiently endured Dino’s shticky offense and then obliterated him with her strong style stuff. She hit the Scorpio Rising or the win at 11:56. This was pretty basic stuff. **¾ 

September 23, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Danshoku Dino def. Meiko Satomura and Shigehiro Irie {KO-D Openweight Championship Elimination Match}
From Road to Ryogoku. This angle felt like a waste of Satomura. She’s capable of having dope matches with dudes and looks like she could hold her own. But she was just an accessory to this weird Dino story. On the other hand, this match ruled. If it was just a random triple threat and wasn’t for the title I think I’d like it even more. Yes, DDT does a ton of comedy, but they’d spent years establishing that the KO-D title was their serious draw. This match was a great match of cute comedy and logical hard work. Dino’s refusal to kiss Satomura made me smile, as did his middle rope walk to try in vain to avoid being crotched. On the other end, everything between Satomura and Irie was intense and made sense. She’d get control by tenaciously peppering him with shots as long as Irie didn’t catch her with a big shot. But he did catch her with big shots, many times. I also liked that Irie was still crazy pissed at Dino for stealing his title. They lifted the piledriver sunset flip block spot from Irie’s three-way in Dayton, which makes me wonder if it originated there or earlier. Dino smooched Irie, which was enough of a distraction for Satomura to hit him with the Scorpio Rising, and for Dino to eliminate him with the Gedo Clutch. Then Dino and Satomura fought for a bit until Dino blocked the Scorpio Rising and hit the Danshoku Driver for the win at 16:09. The finish lost a bit of steam after Irie went out, which makes me yearn for an Irie/Satomura singles match. Never gonna happen. That was pretty much it for Irie in DDT. He wrestled a few more matches, won a tag match at Peter Pan, and then announced he was leaving the company. He wrestled strictly outside of Japan for the next seven months, eventually returning and freelancing for WRESTLE-1 (until it closed), Big Japan, OWE, and All Japan. ***¾ 

October 21, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Daisuke Sasaki def. Danshoku Dino {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan: Fall Wrestling Cultural Festival. This would be like seeing Danhausen vs. Matt Taven in the main event of Final Battle for a half hour. If AEW had run Chris Jericho vs. Orange Cassidy as a PPV main event, that would have been pretty close. I suppose the WWE equivalent would have been Otis vs. Roman Reigns in the WrestleMania main event, but WWE clearly doesn’t have the stones that DDT had. The semi-main was CIMA vs. Takeshita, so I guess they banked on skeptical folks buying in for that match. Sasaki won the King of DDT tournament to get this shot, naturally. Before Dino’s entrance, the Undertaker’s music plays and druids bring out a coffin that has Sasaki’s photo in it. The match is everything you’d expect out of a Dino match that escalates for thirty minutes. The first fifteen were pretty standard, but then Sasaki finally took off his shirt and took the match seriously. Dino responded by getting completely naked. The referee spent the remainder of the match desperately trying to hide Dino’s junk from the crowd. The cock sock mangina moment was… memorable. In the end, Sasaki won with the Crossover Facelock at 32:10. As a way to honor Dino’s contributions to DDT, this was fun. As the marquee match of the year, it was a little baffling. ***¼ 

February 17, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Konosuke Takeshita def. Daisuke Sasaki {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Judgement, DDT’s 22nd Anniversary Show. Takeshita won the D-Oh Grand Prix tournament to earn this title shot. The King of DDT is a single elimination tournament you see, and since every Japanese company must also have a round robin tournament, we wound up with this (this is actually the second year of the tournament). This reminded me a lot of the HARASHIMA headlining matches from ten years earlier, where the matches were artificially “epic” and the fans didn’t make noise for them. The one thing this had over those matches was that this didn’t rely on ten minutes of mat wrestling that went nowhere. What this had in common was that while some of the bits were exciting, none of them felt connected to one another. The final few minutes included some truly breathtaking stuff, but it felt almost wasted in this match because there wasn’t much that built to those moments. Takeshita got the win with the straight jacket suplex at 32:08. ***

April 4, 2019 – Queens, New York

Daisuke Sasaki def. Konosuke Takeshita {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From DDT is Coming to America. I could have gone to this WrestleMania weekend show if I wasn’t busy waiting for Jake Ziegler to get to my apartment for his weekend visit. The truth is that it didn’t even cross my mind to go, but still. It’s funny in hindsight the way that people noted how bloated the weekend in the NYC area was with wrestling shows, only for the tradition to implode the very next year thanks to the pandemic. The production quality is basically the same as an EVOLVE show, which makes sense in a way. What this had that their previous match didn’t have was a hotter crowd (the dueling chants were pretty cool) and a more efficient telling of the same story. It was also a little sloppy so I guess I’ll split the difference. Sasaki hit a pair of low blows and a hurricanrana for the win at 19:00. *** 

Tetsuya Endo def. Daisuke Sasaki {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
Endo turned on his partner Sasaki after the last match and cashed in his Anytime Anywhere Money in the Bank Ripoff Gauntlet to get this shot immediately. Sasaki didn’t really put up a fight. He just got his ass kicked for 4:03 and then lost when Endo hit a Shooting Star Press. Endo and Sasaki made nice after the match. *½ 

July 15, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Konosuke Takeshita def. Tetsuya Endo {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan. Takeshita won the King of DDT Tournament to earn this shot, of course. Some of the insane things that happened in this match included Takeshita hitting Endo with a German suplex from the ring to the floor by using his legs, Takeshita hitting a Storm Cradle Driver after teasing a trapped superkick in the corner, and Endo hitting an arm-trap Canadian Destroyer. This match did away with any pretense of a feeling out process, and really didn’t pay much mind to who had taken how much damage at any point. It was just the top two young, fit dudes throwing everything they had at each other because it was the main event of the biggest show of the year. It was a hell of a contrast to the previous year’s main event, I’ll say that. I could have done with a bit more selling after the monster bombs. But if you want to show your friends the kind of match that gets the kids excited these days, this is a really good one. Takeshita put Endo down with a gnarly Liontamer (the Wall of Takeshita) at 31:38. ****¼ 

November 3, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

HARASHIMA def. Tetsuya Endo {KO-D Openweight Championship vs. DDT Extreme Division Championship Match}
From Ultimate Party. When all is said and done, I’ll have reviewed three title changes from this show. That’s pretty cool, and it’s the kind of big show vibe that Cyber Fight can deliver because they have so many companies that they can add to a supercard like this. This match blew their 2017 match out of the water. It had better pacing, better engagement with the fans, and more at stake. I found it a little odd that there was no hardcore element to it given that the Extreme title was on the line, but that thought didn’t cross my mind until after the match had ended because the pace of this thing was insane. It completely did away with the slow nonsense they found necessary last time around and just hit you over the head with insanely quick action for its entire duration. HARASHIMA hit the Somato for the win at 25:38. HARASHIMA had become a double champion and the only ten-time KO-D Champion with this win. ****¼ 

January 1, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan

Masato Tanaka def. HARASHIMA {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Sweet Dreams! HARASHIMA was still a double champion going into this. Tanaka won the D-Oh Grand Prix tournament to earn this shot. Tanaka spent the first half of the match working HARASHIMA’s leg, which led to nothing and which was annoyingly shrugged off almost immediately. The second half of the match was fun, as it came down to battle of the Sliding D vs. the Somato. The Sliding D won, and Tanaka took home the gold with it at 20:18. ***½ 

June 7, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan

Tetsuya Endo def. Masato Tanaka {KO-D Openweight Championship Match}
From Peter Pan Day 2. Like Wrestle Kingdom and WrestleMania this year, Peter Pan was too big for one night. Because of the pandemic, it was also too dangerous for fans in the arena. Come to think of it, I wonder if they split it over two days so as to have fewer guys in the locker room. For eight weeks in the summer, DDT had a weekly TV show leading up to Peter Pan. Early on in the show, Endo traded wins with Kazusada Higuchi, ultimately earning the KO-D Openweight Challenger Sword and thus this match. He came into this match with the Sword and as one third of the Six-Man Tag Champs. This match was incredible. I don’t think I’ve ever been more engaged in a match with no crowd. There was enough grunting from the wrestlers, shouting from the commentators, and most importantly a lack of ambient noise coming from the building, that I was able to forget that there were no fans. Endo is a really special talent. His selling here was incredible. Tanaka zeroed in on the leg in a far more interesting way here than he did against HARASHIMA, and Endo actually registering it went a long way in making me wonder how he would pull out the win. After finding that his Shooting Star Press was weakened because of the way he favored the leg, he hit the move twice before going for a cover and getting the win at 26:19. Having put over Endo, Tanaka went back to his home promotion of ZERO1. ****½ 

Endo went on to become the first KO-D Champion to win the King of DDT Tournament while Champion. As such he got to pick his opponent for Ultimate Party. He chose Kenny Omega, but the pandemic travel restrictions made them impossible. He picked Sasaki as a backup, so that’s going down at the big fall show. DDT has since started allowing fans into their shows, though not many and quite socially distanced. I really hope that Endo, who I’m just so impressed with, will remain the champion through Ultimate Party and carry the company through the rest of this difficult stretch. It took a long time for DDT to grow on me, but at this point I think it has the most upside of any Japanese company going forward outside of New Japan.