A Cinnabon Excursion: Part 2

On July 1, Takeshita came back from his mini vacation and took part in the Royal Rampage, a two-ring Royal Rumble for a shot at Jon Moxley’s interim AEW Championship. But he didn’t enter until late in match and only lasted four minutes before getting dumped by the Butcher and the Blade. Not worth reviewing the whole thing for that. 

July 3, 2022 – Los Angeles, California 

Daniel Garcia def. Konosuke Takeshita {PWG World Championship Match}
From PWG Nineteen. This was dope; what a shock. Early on, Garcia hit a front dropkick to Takeshita’s leg in order to get the challenger horizontal and put on a front facelock. From there, he stayed on the leg through the entire match, hampering Takeshita’s ability to dive or get a full head of steam. Takeshita did his best to adjust, going for lariats more than knee strikes and hitting them from surprising positions. But Garcia was able to go back to the shortcut of attacking the leg whenever he wanted, and it paid dividends. Takeshita was unable to capitalize after hitting a big knee strike, and Garcia also picked up on when Takeshita was going to go for a lariat. That won him the match, as he countered the top rope lariat to an avalanche slam and put on a leglock for the win at 23:19. I’d like a rematch, and Takeshita’s status as an AEW full timer makes that possible now. ****

July 8, 2022 – Rochester, New York 

Eddie Kingston def. Konosuke Takeshita
From AEW Rampage 49. This was lighter fare than I’ve seen it portrayed to be, but if you’re interested in seeing the protégé of an All Japan legend go up against one of said legend’s biggest fans, this is a totally solid version of that. Lots of no-selling, even though it was too short of a match for that to really mean anything. For those interested in a King’s Road Cliff’s Notes situation, this is for you. For those who get annoyed by such things, take a pass. I found it cute for what it was, though inessential. Kingston hit a pair of spinning back fists for the win at 10:26 (shown of 11:56). ***¼

July 10, 2022 – Ridgefield Park, New Jersey 

Konosuke Takeshita def. Cole Radrick
From JCW The Great American Birthday Bash. I can’t quite decipher what makes a JCW show, except that it’s a Game Changer Wrestling show that takes place in New Jersey and streams free on YouTube. I’m told it’s also more family friendly than GCW shows. I had a hard time buying Radrick’s performance here. He looks like god spilled a human, and I found his extended offense against Takeshita unconvincing at times. When he was being an impish prick, giving Takeshita the bird and flipping around to hit stunners, I was into it. But when he was overpowering Takeshita and kicking out of moves like the Cinnabomb I found it completely unbelievable. As in, not believable. Takeshita finally put Radrick down with the jumping knee and the Zahi at 15:19. At least the crowd was into it. **¾

July 13, 2022 – Savannah, Georgia 

Jon Moxley def. Konosuke Takeshita
From AEW Dynamite 145: Fyter Fest. I’m not sure how losing to Eddie Kingston qualifies Takeshita to get this match, which would have earned him a shot at Moxley’s interim title had he won. AEW’s booking is weird. Why do people get worked up when WWE has contender matches featuring the title holders but not when AEW does it? Is it because the champions usually win in AEW and often don’t in WWE? I guess that’s sort of legit, but I don’t like this practice in WWE or AEW. Like the match against Adam Page, this had its issues. First, Moxley no-selling a German suplex on the apron is infuriating. Why do that kind of move at all if it means nothing for the match? Second, we come back from commercial and Takeshita is bleeding. We needed blood in a match between two babyfaces who have never wrestled each other before and have no issue with each other? This is an inmates running the asylum issue. What did the blood accomplish? It wasn’t telling us that Takeshita was in way over his head, because he handled himself very well against Moxley and got a great near fall off of a German suplex late in the match. It wasn’t that he was a plucky fighter who would scream and strike his way to relevance the way Wheeler YUTA did against Moxley a few months back. It was just gratuitous because Moxley matches have blood. In fact, the match got way better after the blood was wiped away and things fell more in line with Takeshita’s other great matches in which he reverses his opponents’ big moves into his own signature offense. Moxley caught him with a second Death Death Rider, the unprotected elbows, and a Bully Choke for the win at 10:29 (shown of 13:13). So yeah, the second half of this match is very good, after some very irritating things in the first half. ***½

July 16, 2022 – Orlando, Florida

Konosuke Takeshita def. Anthony Henry
From AEW Dark 153. This was from a studio TV taping, so it streamed almost a month after it occurred. Still no Takeshita in the thumbnail. Baffling. I wish this match had happened in front of a crowd that cared about Henry at all. He got to show off plenty given the amount of time allotted to this match, reversing a lot of Takeshita’s offense and getting a decent amount of damage to the knee. This was the first instance during his U.S. tour that Takeshita successfully hit the Cinnabomb, after a handful of failed attempts in previous matches. He followed that up with the jumping knee for the win at 7:48. ***

July 16, 2022 – Seattle, Washington 

Konosuke Takeshita def. Davey Richards
From DEFY The World is Yours. This match started out terrific. Richards rabidly went after Takeshita’s leg, which was a solid strategy except for the fact that Takeshita was much taller than him and could hit powerful lariats even from a kneeling position. What an amazing display of a size discrepancy interesting in a new way. Regardless, Richards mostly whooped Takeshita’s ass here. There was a bit of no-selling from Takeshita, in the fighting spirit fashion, but I liked its use here especially because even as Takeshita popped up from big moves he’d just fall victim to a new big move and get more and more in trouble. In fact, Takeshita won out of desperation here, flipping back while in a leglock and pressing Richards’ shoulders to the mat for the win at 12:33. An incredible little match that made Takeshita look smart, strong, and resourceful while Richards still looked dangerous. ****

July 17, 2022- Seattle, Washington

Konosuke Takeshita def. Schaff
From the next night in DEFY. Schaff attacked before the bell (way before the bell) so we got a few minutes of ringside brawling before the match officially began. This Schaff character is good. I’ve seen three of his matches now and have liked all of them. I’m surprised he’s not a bigger presence on the indies. It looks like he only works DEFY and AAW. He must have a good day job. This wasn’t the technical marvel the previous night’s match was, which is cool because the DEFY fans got to see Takeshita in one of those and in a very good power brawl. That they felt the need to protect Schaff with a wonky finish speaks to how highly the company regards him, but it made for a weak ending. Ethan HD came out, presumably to try to distract Takeshita, but it was Schaff who got distracted. That led directly to Takeshita hitting a German suplex and the Zahi for the win at 10:34. ***½

July 21, 2022 – Morrow, Georgia 

Jonathan Gresham def. Konosuke Takeshita
From Terminus 3. This was Gresham’s last appearance outside of ROH as the ROH Champ. This was pretty good. Gresham sort of botched one springboard move but rather seamlessly recovered from the mistake. It took nothing away from the rest of the match. Gresham spent a lot of the match working Takeshita’s arm, which played directly into the finish and a couple of times helped Gresham stop Takeshita from gaining momentum. Takeshita lasted over a minute in the Octopus Stretch, so Gresham switched it up and elbowed Takeshita until the referee called for the bell at 14:56 (four seconds shy of the time limit). And with that, Gresham hands Takeshita his first indie loss. Takeshita immediately fought back after Gresham gave him some room, making the referee’s call look like a bad one. After the match, Gresham rags on the referee and challenges Takeshita to a rematch, making me wonder if the finish was botched or if it was planned that way to get Takeshita back to Terminus. I wonder if, in hindsight, Tony Khan wishes he’d refused to let Takeshita do the job, or if the wonky finish here was enough to do the same trick. Or if Khan even cares about what happens on the indies. ***¼

July 22, 2022 – Portland, Oregon

Konosuke Takeshita def. Kevin Blackwood
From Prestige Wrestling Nonstop Feeling. This is the main event. How long until someone nuts up and puts a title on Takeshita? I mentioned a match in C4 between Blackwood and Mike Bailey that I didn’t much care for, and how I was even more impressed with Bailey’s West Coast Pro match against Takeshita as compared to said C4 match. Well, now I see that Blackwood was the problem. This guy just refuses to sell. He’s in there with a guy who is capable of a lot of nuance in a match, and all he wants to do is throw huge and receive huge moves then get right back up. That’s video game bullshit. That kind of stuff might get a small crowd like this riled up, but it looks like crap on tape. And the crowd being hyped didn’t add anything to the experience because the sound mixing was awful and the commentary was way louder than the fans. Takeshita ended this with the Cinnabomb at 16:55. **½

July 23, 2022 – Newark, New Jersey

Konosuke Takeshita tld. Josh Alexander
From Garden State Pro Wrestling Welcome to Eden. What a crazy weekend Takeshita has had, flying from Georgia to Oregon to New Jersey. This is the main event GSPW’s debut show. They’ve had two shows since and haven’t booked either of these guys. From a continuity standpoint that’s annoying, but from a business standpoint it’s reasonable that they’d want two guys who are hot on the scene right now for the debut main event. The gender equity on this show is wild; a nine-match show had three women’s matches, and both commentators were women. Pretty cool. I found the timer at the bottom of the screen during the Terminus match pretty distracting, and the same is true here. Luckily, it’s only on the screen intermittently. This time, the match goes to a 20-minute time limit draw without any issue. And it’s an awesome road to that draw. Alexander used the same leg attack game plan as Richards, and because he’s bigger, stronger, and younger than Richards he had a lot more success with that plan. Takeshita got in the similar desperate (and awesome) lariats from defensive positions, but when it counted most his close pin was thwarted by his injured leg, which gave out during a bridging German suplex. Alexander went after that leg with an anklelock, but the time limit expired just as Takeshita looked ready to tap. Perhaps a rematch for the Impact title at some point? ***¾

July 25, 2022 – Duluth, Georgia

Konosuke Takeshita def. JD Drake
From AEW Dark: Elevation 73. Takeshita finally makes the thumbnail for the YouTube episode. This did not go how I expected it to, which was a pleasant surprise. Drake actually dominated this short match, which worked in Takeshita’s favor anyway because when Takeshita decided he’d had enough, he caught Drake with the Blue THunder Bomb and casually hit the jumping knee for the win at 3:40. A sort of anti-squash, which beats Drake completely without making him look too weak. I’ll take it. **¼

July 29, 2022 – Nashville, Tennessee

Konosuke Takeshita def. Nick Wayne
From BLP The Gang Crosses the Line. I can’t tell if people are using the word banger to describe good wrestling matches ironically at this point, but if not we’re long past the point of oversaturation of that term. It feels like an example of millennials using a Gen Z word and sounding really lame doing it. Speaking of Gen Z, Wayne is only 17 years old?! Wow. Is that why he’s signed to AEW but hasn’t wrestled a match for them? I was having a hard time buying how much success Wayne was having throwing elbows in this match, so it pleased me greatly when Takeshita started boastfully and forcefully shrugging them off. This worked for me more when Wayne used flips and chinbreakers to gain control than it did when he was hitting suplexes. Takeshita hit the Zahi for 2 (give me a break) and the Cinnabomb for the win at 12:40. ***

July 31, 2022 – Nashville, Tennessee 

Jonathan Gresham def. Alan Angels, Konosuke Takeshita, and Nick Wayne {Number One Contender Four Way Match}
From JCP Ric Flair’s Last Match. This is for a shot at the PROGRESS Championship. The set for this show was meant to be a throwback to Mid-Atlantic TV, but it looked more like parody given what the main event was. Funny that this is not only Takeshita’s first match against a previous opponent from this excursion, but it’s against two previous opponents. Tony Shiavone doesn’t strike me as a bootlicking company man, but it was funny to hear him do commentary on a match that Gresham won given how Gresham left AEW. Angels left the company more judiciously, so there’s more discourse about his career status on commentary. There was too much happening in too small of a window to feel emotionally attached to any of it. Everyone hit everything nicely, but there was no story to any of it. Gresham was the first person to string more than two moves together, and that was enough to get him the win with an O’Connor Roll on Angels at 5:40. **¼

And that does it for July. I’ll be back with one more post covering Takeshita’s work in the U.S. and the U.K. in August before he headed back home to Japan.