History of the World Championships | 2021-June

Things were really quiet in western hemisphere in June, but there was some activity in Japan.

June 6, 2021 – Saitama, Saitama

Naomichi Marufuji def. Keiji Muto {GHC Heavyweight Championship Match}
From CyberFight Fest. Under the Great Muta persona, Muto beat Marufuji two years earlier in their first encounter. I liked the story here, that Muto was a force of perpetual motion, but that he would glitch out when Marufuji would pepper him with kicks. The speed of the challenger was too much for the old man to take, and eventually the system gave out after the Tiger King Zero at 23:30. A very nice end to Muta’s reign while working around his limitations. ***½

June 7, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka

Shingo Takagi def. Kazuchika Okada {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 13th NJPW Dominion. Ospreay got injured in his first title defense against Takagi and had to vacate the thing. Okada was going to be Ospreay’s next challenger I think, so he and Takagi were chosen for this match. Takagi and Okada were 1-1 in singles matches going into this. In the lead up to this match, Okada said that this title is cursed, as witnessed by Ospreay’s injury and Ibushi losing in his first defense. He also says that it was the last title that cursed this title for breaking off from its lineage. That’s amazing. Also amazing is how much more expressive Takagi is now than when I was watching him actively 15 years ago. The look of surprise and then fear in his eyes when Okada choked him was great, as was his last gasp lunge toward the ropes. He had a similar look of surprise when the Last Dragon got him the win at 36:01. I think all of us mid aught indie/Dragon Gate fans feel very validated today. ****¼

June 12, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan

HUB def. Kengo { Tenryu Project International Junior Heavyweight Championship Match }
From Tenryu Project Survive the Revolution Vol. 4. A bit of background in the hyperlink above. HUB beat Kenichiro Arai and Kengo beat TSUBASA to get to this match. This felt like three potentially interesting matches stapled together without much connecting them aside from HUB’s jumping knee strikes. The last couple minutes were pretty wild though, seeing HUB fail to get the win with a Jackhammer or a tail-assisted lariat, but finishing off Kengo with the Arumaka Shuryo at 19:59. That is an insane move that I don’t think every wrestler is equipped to take. ***

June 13, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan

Kaori Yoneyama def. Sonoko Kato {Oz Academy Openweight Championship Match}
From Oz Academy’s the End of Bright. The first half of this match was a drag. It was curtain jerker style comedy that in my opinion felt out of place in the main event. I know Yoneyama is silly and she’s playing mind games, but she just talked so much. Less talky, more fighty. The final few minutes were what I wish more of the match had been, and the work that went into building up and paying off Yoneyama’s final Yone-ZOU (Code Red) finisher was great. Sato’s sit out method of blocking the move is one I’m surprised I hadn’t seen before. Yoneyama hit it for the win at 12:01. ***

June 24, 2021 – Jeffersonville, Indiana

Logan James def. Tyler Matrix {IWA Mid-South World Heavyweight Championship Ladder Match}
From IWA Mid-South Tag, You’re It. I wouldn’t say it must necessarily suck to take big bumps in front of a very small crowd like this one. I would say it must necessarily suck when that small crowd sits on their hands for all of those bumps. More sad was when they had intense stretches of wrestling and the crowd didn’t really react. They did react to that more than the bumps, which isn’t surprising because it’s more interesting to watch wrestlers try to incapacitate each other and go for the win than it is to see them set up intricate spots. James retrieved the belt after a rather dramaless final minute at 24:52. ***

June 26, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan

Jake Lee def. Kento Miyahara and Yuma Aoyagi {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Tomoe Battle Match}
From AJPW Champions Night: From the Land of the Triple Crown Unification Flight to the 50th Anniversary. That title is a little weird since the 50th anniversary is in 2022. After 454 days as champion, Suwama was stripped of the title because he tested positive for COVID-19 a week before what was set to be a title defense against Lee here. This match had been delayed a few weeks because of a new COVID outbreak in Japan. This disease just fucked over Lee’s coronation big time. The hype video is great. It shows the legacy of the title with Jumbo Tsuruta, Genichiro Tenryu, Stan Hansen, Mitsuharu Misawa, Toshiaki Kawada, Kenta Kobashi, and Keiji Muto (with Taiyo Kea off to the side). It showed Lee’s Champion Carnival finals win over Miyahara, which should have given him a match against champion Suwama. Instead, he takes on the World Tag Team Champions here in a Tomoe Battle. It’s a round robin series of matches that goes until someone wins two matches in a row. Or maybe until they pin both opponents? Either way it’s pretty neat.

NEXTREAM explodes as Miyahara and Aoyagi fought first. Another cool thing about this match is each wrestler came to the ring holding one of the original titles that made up the Triple Crown, symbolically reunifying them after Suwama’s forced vacancy. Unsurprisingly, this took a few minutes to get into a groove. It picked up when Aoyagi took control and looked like he might submission maneuver himself into a win. But Miyahara fought hard to hit the Shutdown Suplex to win the fall at 18:28. He got a few minutes to breath during Lee’s entrance while Aoyagi took a break. Lee took advantage of Miyahara’s exhaustion and caught him with a back suplex to win the second fall at 10:09. The final fall saw Lee have little difficulty with Aoyagi, only coming close to being in trouble after he gloated too much and took the tag champ for granted. But then he put Aoyagi away with the D4C at 19:04. I like this gimmick. I know the fight order was set by chance, and I wonder if they hyped this as Lee winning the best slot. Because coming in after two guys had just fought fresh and making quick work of one of them is certainly the best chance to win. And while they did good work (and AJPW-heads seem to have really liked this), it fell a little flat for me. There was nothing subversive or dramatic. Lee winning the title by, in the end, pinning another guy who’d never been champion just didn’t blow my socks off. ***½

June 26, 2021 – Hartselle, Alabama

Derek Neal def. Cabana Man Dan {New South Championship Leather Strap Match}
From New South Americana. Right away this match wins me over as Neal easily wins a tug of war not just because he’s larger, but because Dan wrestles barefoot and thus has no traction. Sadly, the match lost me almost immediately with it’s vague and unengaging rules. This was a tap-the-corners strap match, which is dumb, and the way they used the stipulation was extra dumb. The rule tends to be that by the referee’s discretion, a person’s corner tap count resets if their path is halted. So you’d think that would mean that if Neal tapped a corner and then Dan immediately tapped the same corner, that’d stop Neal’s count and vice versa. Nope, they did the stupid tap chasing spot made famous by Savio Vega and Steve Austin. Only these two are no Steve and Savio, and this didn’t lead to the finish. This terrible finish saw 2 Fly Ty hit Dan with brass knuckles, then Dan stop Neal from hitting a fourth turnbuckle pad, but then Neal taking his time to spit in Dan’s face and hit a powerbomb, and finally Neal hitting a fourth turnbuckle for the win at 14:02 despite clearly having his path blocked. The lack of imagination on display here was groan-inducing. **¼

June 26, 2021 – Houston, Texas

Bryan Keith def. Mysterious Q { New Texas Pro Championship Match }
From New Texas Pro Boesch. I heard about New Texas Pro in a group text because the new ROH Women’s Championship was defended in the company a few months after this match. In that same conversation, I was told that Keith is pretty good. So I checked out this title’s history (peep the link above for the previous two title changes in the lineage). The crowd is loud for both guys, which speaks volumes for the build for this match. Keith is very clearly a massive Toshiaki Kawada fan. The match started off with trading forearms, followed by Keith no-selling Q’s finisher right off the bat, followed by Keith using the Ganso Bomb. Later in the match, he hit consecutive enziguiris a la Kawada too. I’m not saying any of this to bring Keith down, just mentioning it because it’s obvious. He also finished the match with a more authentic Ganso Bomb at 19:10. If you want to see someone play Kawada, this is the match for you. It’s not like Kawada is using those moves anymore. ***½