Takeshita’s summer tour comes to an end.
August 5, 2022 – Grand Rapids, Michigan
Konosuke Takeshita def. Ryan Nemeth
From AEW Rampage 53. This was a very squishy squash. Takeshita blocked a neckbreaker about a minute in and then hit the Blue Thunder Bomb and the Zahi for the win at 1:40. Just there to build Takeshita up for Claudio Castagnoli the following night (or in real life, later in the night) on Battle of the Belts. And that’s just fine with me. Frankly, AEW could stand to do a few more squashes like this and fewer fake squashes like the last Takeshita vs. Nemeth match. N/A
August 6, 2022 – Grand Rapids, Michigan
Claudio Castagnoli def. Konosuke Takeshita {ROH World Championship Match}
From AEW Battle of the Belts III. The funny thing about these Battle of the Belts specials is that the same titles end up featured on them every time out. The TNT Championship and the Women’s World Championship have been on all three, and the ROH belt has been on the last two, replacing the FTW title which appeared on the first one. Yikes, Taz got called out for a dumb comment right off the bat, but then the rest of the commentators had to dumb themselves down so as to not humiliate him. That aside, this was the best match from any of these specials so far. The crowd was into Takeshita’s journey, figuring out better counters to Castagnoli’s uppercuts and finding more success hitting his signature moves as the match went on. But Castagnoli turned that gameplan on Takeshita. The key to this match was Takeshita’s knee strike. Castagnoli blocked the first go at it, but fell victim to the second. That was all the signal you’d need to know who had the momentum. But Castagnoli put an end to Takeshita’s momentum when he countered a jumping knee to a DDT. A couple minutes later, the Ricola Bomb finished the challenger at 16:24 (shown of 19:59). I just realized this match was a battle of confection powerbombs (Ricola Bomb vs. Cinnabomb). Also, the commentary redeemed itself by pointing out a lot of the little things that Castagnoli does that make his matches more engaging than most. I’ve seen a lot of people gush even more over this match, making me wonder if the picture-in-picture segment was very good or if it’s just the typical over-inflated AEW rating. ****
August 6, 2022 – Raleigh, North Carolina
Konosuke Takeshita def. Andrew Everett
From DPW Believe the Hype. I’ve seen fake big man Everett featured in a couple of matches, but have yet to be impressed by him. Takeshita has a Cinnabon tank top on. Surprised it took him this long to start wearing the swag. I liked very much that they spent the whole match teasing Everett hitting a chokeslam, and then when he finally connected with it, Takeshita kicked out at one. The looks on the fans’ faces were priceless. I’m also glad that the avalanche chokeslam was blocked and Takeshita then hit the lariat up there. He followed that up with the Zahi and the Cinnabomb for the win at 18:41. If I was in attendance at this show I’d be quite pleased with this main event. I don’t know if it’s worth paying the silly high DPW on demand subscription price, but if you’re into DPW anyway you should check out this match. ***½
August 7, 2022 – Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Konosuke Takeshita def. JDX
From MAW Summer Heat. Takeshita is really slumming it here, doing an outdoor show for an obscure Midwest indie in a brewery parking lot. That said, DDT runs outdoor shows in front of small crowds so it’s not like he’s not used to this. And the crowd seems stoked to see him. And JDX is known enough to have worked a few AEW Darks before. JDX’s Wolverine gear is pretty sharp. Takeshita is announced as a Ring of Honor superstar. I wonder if that’s because the Castagnoli match aired the night before or because Takeshita is actually slotted to do more with the ROH brand. The commentators hype this as a likely Match of the Year, which is maybe putting too much pressure on these guys given the environment. Someone, I assume the booker, is caught on a hot mic thanking someone else for helping to get JTG booked on this show. This is amateur hour and I’m eating it up. There wasn’t much to the match beyond solid back-and-forth action, but I can’t imagine anyone in attendance expected more. Takeshita picked up the win with the Cinnabomb for the win at 17:38. After the match, Takeshita shows respect to the hometown mainstay he just defeated. **¾
August 13, 2022 – Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Konosuke Takeshita def. Leon Slater
From PROGRESS Chapter 137: The Deadly Viper Tour – Codename: Copperhead. Takeshita’s opponent was meant to be Robbie X, but X got injured. Slater turned out to be a solid replacement. The commentators mention that this match will be on WWE Network and Peacock, which is interesting given WWE supposedly tried to sign Takeshita after seeing his output and the fan reaction to him on this excursion. What was otherwise a fine if forgettable sprint was made more interesting when Slater was able to adapt to some of Takeshita’s tactics mid-match. He ate Takeshita’s devastating elbow early in the match, but later was able to absorb some of the blow and kip up immediately after. He also ducked the jumping knee, sending Takeshita to the floor. But back in the ring, Takeshita hit the lariat up top and the Zahi for the win at 12:17. ***¼
August 14, 2022 – Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear
Konosuke Takeshita def. Dean Allmark
From PROGRESS Chapter 138: The Deadly Viper Tour – Codename: Cottonmouth. The camera setup for this show is bogus. The venue is a pub, with fans seated around three sides of the ring. The fourth side sees the ring just a few feet away from a wall and an emergency exit, and the hard cam is inexplicably pointing at that wall. So for a large chunk of the match, you’re seeing wrestling happening in front of zero fans. Just bush league nonsense. Are there Brits who prefer this to RevPro? This match was bad. Takeshita does these matches where there is no selling at all about one out of every six times he’s in the ring. It’s very irritating. Early on, he hit Allmark with a Yakuza kicked that knocked him pretty deep into the crowd. Allmark was back on his feet seconds later in and in control. Later, Allmark hit the Ruby Cutter and dropped Takeshita on his neck with it. I’ve never seen Allmark wrestle before but I have to assume from the way everything played out that this isn’t normally how the move is taken. In any event, Takeshita didn’t sell it at all and came back with a Beach Break seconds later. The commentators tried to tie in the no-selling, saying that Allmark was able to kick out of the Beach Break because Takeshita had just been hit with the Ruby Cutter. But being dropped on your neck doesn’t change gravity, and the Beach Break is just a guy being dropped onto his head and shoulders. Allmark was up a second later, spinning Takeshita in circles and getting near falls. And then Takeshita decided he had enough and hit the Cinnabomb for the at 10:05. I kind of hated this. **
August 15, 2022 – Minneapolis, Minnesota
Konosuke Takeshita def. Cezar Bononi
From AEW Dark: Elevation 76. This was a weird one on a lot of levels. You had a perfectly good peak to Takeshita’s AEW tour with the Castagnoli match. He fought hard and lost in a match that had a lot of people talking. But because he was booked on one more show and there was no creative left for him, we got this afterthought. Okay, so that’s one weird thing, but then he spent three minutes getting hammered on by Bononi. One spot allowed him to show his strength, and he managed to put Bononi down with very few shots (culminating in the Zahi at 2:37). If it’s me, I either don’t book this match at all, or I book Takeshita to go over Bononi without taking as much offense. Why all the fake squashes? Excalibur notes on commentary that Takeshita will be back in the fall, so let him go out strong. *½
Takeshita made it back to Japan in time for DDT’s big Peter Pan show. He’ll be back in the States in November, presumably recharged. So I’ll probably be back with more excursion reviews too.