As Kushida, this man’s time in NXT was frustrating. He’d infrequently be put into a position to perform at a high level, and when he was in that position he always delivered. He had great matches there against Drew Gulak, WALTER, Johnny Gargano, and Kyle O’Reilly. But by the time he formed Jacket Time with Ikemen Jiro, it was clear that there was no interest in pushing him seriously. He clearly knew that too and got out.
Triple H is now in charge in WWE, much earlier than anyone ever expected, and it’s hard not to know if leaving might have been an error on Kushida’s part. On the one hand, even when Triple H was in charge, Kushida wasn’t getting sustained pushes. On the other hand, he’s reportedly been told that he’ll only get pushed so far in New Japan, which is why he signed with WWE in the first place.
So I’m not going to look at his progression in Japan as I’m not convinced there will be much, but rather how he performs in the United States as KUSHIDA now that he’s able to do so in front of crowds outside of the WWE Performance Center.
July 28, 2022 – Louisville, Kentucky
KUSHIDA def. Rich Swann
From Impact 938. This was a good introduction to the real KUSHIDA, in that it was a win in the main event of an episode of the company’s flagship show, against a quality, popular opponent, in front of an enthusiastic crowd. That last bit makes me think that this probably wasn’t the main event of the tapings as the fans weren’t burned out yet. KUSHIDA got to do his thing, he and Swann got to play around with a couple of cool strike exchanges. Once Swann went for a chop on the floor and hit the post after KUSHIDA ducked, you could see the finish very clearly. But they made the road to get there pretty fun. Swann almost took the match when the fight went to the top rope, but KUSHIDA caught him with a handspring kick and then brought him down to earth with the Hoverboard Lock for the win at 15:29. ***¾
July 30, 2022 – Nashville, Tennessee
KUSHIDA tld. Alex Shelley
From NJPW Music City Mayhem. You get the sense that NJPW wanted to show that they could handle the Timesplitters legacy better than NXT did. But like, of course they could, it’s their legacy. Mixed feelings on this one. At first, I didn’t understand what was gained by having this go to a draw. KUSHIDA was freshly returned to this part of the wrestling world and could have used another strong win similar to the one over Swann, while Shelley’s career trajectory was winding down. But then I remembered that there was the kink that Shelley had an upcoming title match against Impact’s Josh Alexander booked. So having him take a loss just two weeks before would have been a bad look. Okay, fine. Then I felt that the match was moving quite slowly for one with a 20-minute time limit. When the final minute remaining announcement was made, both guys kicked into high gear in an exciting way. It didn’t make for the most interesting match leading up to that point (though it was never boring and everything they did made sense), but I can appreciate that some matches exist to show that guys who are sort of taking it easy on each other because they’re friends run out of time to do enough damage to win. I don’t think you should have to rationalize the action to make a match good, but that happened here for me anyway. KUSHIDA kicked out of the Shellshock and put on the Hoverboard Lock as the time limit expired at 20:00. ***½
August 11, 2022 – Louisville, Kentucky
KUSHIDA def. Deaner
From Impact 940. This was shaping up to be little more than a squash for KUSHIDA, but Joe Doering distracted him and Deaner was able to take control for a bit. There wasn’t a lot to this as they kept it short and Deaner, who I’m seeing for the first time in this match, seems pretty limited. Chris Sabin stopped Doering from getting physically involved and came back from an eye gouge to incapacitate Deaner’s arm and hit an arm-trap suplex for the win at 5:15. **½
August 12, 2022 – Cicero, Illinois
Eric Young & Deaner def. KUSHIDA & Chris Sabin
From Impact Emergence. So is Violent by Design supposed to be a Proud Boys analogue? I mostly ask because of the yellow flag. This was set up by a Motor City Machine Guns vs. Deaner & Doering match in which the babyfaces won. That doesn’t make much sense to me. But at the very least, KUSHIDA’s impulse to help his long-time tag partner’s even longer-time tag partner while said wrestler is vying for the big belt in the main event does make sense. This had previously been advertised as Deaner & Doering taking on the Time Guns, but Young decided to “lead by example.” I wish that meant he’d have replaced Deaner, but it seems like Doering is either injured or holding back he’s set for an AJPW booking next month. Either way, I suppose it’s good that the VbD team isn’t the exact one that already lost in this feud. This was a totally solid tag team match. KUSHIDA & Sabin were flashier but Violent by Design did some grounded tag team stuff that I enjoyed a lot. Their aerial attack from opposite corners was also neat. Near the end, all four guys ended up doing some over-choreographed punching, which I did not like. I also did not like the finish. Doering got involved, shoving Sabin off the top rope to the floor, which led directly to Young hitting Sabin with a piledriver for the win at 12:42. That’s a bummer, but if it leads to a six-man tag match at Victory Road where the Time Gun trio wins then it won’t have been for nothing. ***
August 25, 2022 – Cicero, Illinois
KUSHIDA, Alex Shelley & Chris Sabin def. Eric Young, Deaner & Joe Doering
From Impact 942. So the PPV tag match was building to a six-man tag match on TV? Why do wrestling companies do feuds backwards? Time Splitters + MCMG = Time Machine. That makes more sense than the Time Guns, I suppose. This was a cute introduction to the Time Machine. We didn’t get all that much interesting from Violent by Design, but our heroes played things scrappy in a slightly above average performance for most of the match, and then showed off a bunch of triple-team offense that played off of their historic double-team bits. I like that. Sabin hit Deaner with the Cradle Shock for the win at 15:18. ***
August 27, 2022 – Charlotte, North Carolina
KUSHIDA & Ren Narita def. Anthony Henry & JD Drake
From NJPW STRONG 104. The Workhorsemen have got a really great tandem arsenal going. They make the most out of Henry’s striking and mat-based offense and Drake’s size. KUSHIDA and Narita played off of them very well. While it would have been cool to get some of that same cohesion from the Japanese team, this is the first time they’ve paired up so it makes sense that they wouldn’t have that kind of thing together. I was even kind of surprised that they won, as at least in the immediate future they aren’t going to be teaming again. But they’re both dope and the Workhorsemen are dope, so for the brief amount of time they were all in the ring, the match was dope. KUSHIDA pinned Henry absolutely out of nowhere with a hammerlock suplex at 11:18. Were they running short on time? ***¼
That about does it for KUSHIDA’s first American tour post-NXT. He came back for another STRONG taping, but that felt more like a one-off, especially as he didn’t participate in the Impact tapings that occurred around the same time. As far as his performance, he absolutely started off strong with the great singles matches against Swann and Shelley, and while his own energy was up in the tag matches, there wasn’t a lot of room for him to really shine. He has signaled that he’s in the twilight of his career, so I’m curious how much of a bang he’ll decide to go out with.