Shingo Takagi: Struggling Dragon

All but the final match in this post are from the 2020 G1 Climax Tournament. Takagi was coming off being betrayed by EVIL and having to forfeit his NEVER six-man titles, and losing his NEVER Openweight Championship to Minoru Suzuki. He was in dire need of some momentum, and a rematch with Suzuki in the tournament would certainly give him some. 

September 19, 2020 – Osaka, Osaka

Jay White def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Takagi is now 0-2 against White. Sigh. This was looking like it might be on par with their match from the previous year, but White’s game plan was a lot more believable here than it was in that match. Whereas there he more or less took a beating and then strung together a few magic moves to win, here cheated all the way through to maintain control quite a bit. This match features one of the gnarliest shoulder tackles I’ve ever seen, and I’m glad White was the recipient of it. It felt like Takagi was on his way to winning because of the way he was able to adapt to White’s evasive tactics. A ref bump meant that the Last of the Dragon didn’t get Takagi the win. White then hit a low blow, a modified Regalplex, and cross-armed suplex, and the Blade Runner for the win at 19:28. The finish was a little flat, but not nearly as tacked on as the year before. I’ll take the improvement. ***¾ 

September 23, 2020 – Sapporo, Hokkaido

Jeff Cobb def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Takagi is now 0-2 against Cobb as well. The story of this tournament thus far has not been Takagi regaining momentum. I was not impressed with the match between these two in the previous year’s tournament. This was a bit more fun and a lot more interesting. Whereas that match was pretty basic, this one saw Takagi unable in most cases to find an answer to Cobb’s size. When the speed picked up near the end, Takagi started to get a little bit of velocity going. Cobb was able to blunt him and caught him with the Tour of the Islands for the win at 11:44. Love the way Takagi was trying but failing to squirm out of that final pin. ***¼ 

September 27, 2020 – Kobe, Hyogo

Shingo Takagi def. Will Ospreay {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Takagi is now 1-1 against Ospreay, and has avenged his first ever pinfall loss in New Japan. Their first match is considered by Cagematch users to be one of the top 100 matches of all time. I liked it a lot as well. I liked this a decent bit less. It’s not bad by any stretch, but it lacked the intensity of their first go-round. Part of that can be chalked up to the clap-only crowd, but even the claps were less than they could have been. There wasn’t a ton to this beyond flashy back-and-forth action. Why was Takagi the victor here? What was different than in their last match? Was it just that Ospreay was unable to do as much flashy counter offense? I suppose that works. It could also have been things like the way that in the middle of one of Ospreay’s match-opening flippy numbers, Takagi backed away from the exchange earlier here than he did in their first match. Before the match could overstay its welcome, Takagi clotheslined Ospreay off the top rope, then hit the STAY DREAM, the Pumping Bomber, and a kind of nerfed Last of the Dragon for the win at 22:03. ***¾ 

September 30, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan

Tomohiro Ishii def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Takagi is now 2-1 against Ishii. It’s a shame too, because after this Takagi beat Ishii twice more. It would have been cool to see a storyline in the future in which Ishii runs up against Takagi, determined to get a win over him. But with his tournament win here, that angle wouldn’t make sense. Anyway, Takagi’s first match against Ishii is also in Cagematch’s top 100 matches of all time. Their second match was for Takagi’s NEVER Openweight Championship, which I liked less than the first (and I didn’t think the first was one of the greatest matches of all time either). Ishii wrestled as if Takagi had kicked his dog, hitting gnarly elbows and nutty suplexes throughout the match. For a time, he did a solid job of avoiding Takagi’s signature offense, forcing Takagi to hit a gutbuster instead of MADE IN JAPAN and countering Takagi’s lariats to side suplexes. Even when Takagi was doing well, he seemed frustrated at how slippery Ishii was proving to be. Ishii countered the Last of the Dragon to a DDT, then hit a lariat and a brainbuster for the win at 26:01. While I do wish Takagi had beaten Ishii a few more times before Ishii got this win, I found this utterly convincing as the story of a guy who’d been beaten twice and then figured out how to not lose a third time. I might like this more than their first match. ****¼ 

The following week, Takagi beat Yujiro Takahashi to stay alive in the tournament. I’m never going to review a Takagi vs. Takahashi match. What’s the point? Takagi will always win and the match will always be forgettable. 

October 7, 2020 – Hiroshima, Hiroshima

Shingo Takagi def. Kota Ibushi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Ibushi was a visiting member of New Hazard for a very brief period in September of 2007, so NEW HAZARD EXPLODES and A MATCH 15 YEARS IN THE MAKING and all that. I’d like to call this match overrated, but New Japan main events that get 4.5 stars from Dave Meltzer and an 8.5 score from Cagematch are pretty much an admission of mediocrity. New Japan Derangement Syndrome runs deep. This was good enough for a pandemic wrestling match, but it took forever to get going, and when it did it didn’t go all that far. Ibushi hit a running knee, but Takagi countered the V-Trigger to the Last of the Dragon for the win at 21:56. On the one hand, that last minute of action seemed to be signaling the match finally kicking into high gear, so it was a shame for it to end there. On the other hand, it shouldn’t take 20 minutes to get to that point. And on that same second hand, I kind of love Takagi putting an end to Ibushi just as it looked like Ibushi was about to shift the momentum of the match. ***½ 

October 10, 2020 – Osaka, Osaka 

Kazuchika Okada def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
According to Cagematch, this was the main event of the 41st best wrestling event of all time. The top two matches both broke 9.0 on their scale and Meltzer gave both of them five-and-a-quarter stars א. My expectations of it would be unreasonable if I didn’t know that people are delusional when it comes to New Japan opinions. That said, I’ve seen two Takagi vs. Okada matches that I’ve liked (Takagi’s IWGP World Heavyweight title win and loss), so I actually did expect to enjoy this. Anyway, Takagi CARRIED Okada to a very good match here. The whole performance hinged on Takagi selling Okada’s Money Clip chokehold, and he did it better than anyone else could have. Slowly but surely throughout the match, shrugging it off more and more slowly. Meanwhile, he was determined to clothesline Okada into defeat, even hitting a Rainmaker that looked better than when Okada would do it. It did take a while to get going, as is always the case in Okada matches, and the main reason I have a hard time losing myself in them. Good on Takagi. The best moment of this match was Takagi, while stuck in the Money clip, grabbing the referee by his shirt to stop him from running to tell the timekeeper to ring the bell. But moments later, Okada got the hold back on and Takagi passed out at 27:45. I’m pretty sure at this point that Takagi was mathematically eliminated from the tournament. ****¼ 

October 13, 2020 – Hamamatsu, Shizuoka 

Taichi def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Of all the people that needed to get a win back from Takagi (who beat him in last yaer’s tournament), did Taichi deserve this? I prefer their 2019 match to this, for one thing because the result here is silly, and for another because the action was a lot more flat in 2020. Takagi controlled most of this, even rather easily handling Taichi’s cheating. But Taichi blocked the Last of the Dragon and Takagi never got his groove back. Taichi finished Takagi with the Black Mephisto at 16:21. Takagi got his revenge two years later, in the King of Pro Wrestling division of all places. ***

October 13, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Minoru Suzuki {Round Robin Tournament Match}
Both guys were already eliminated from the tournament. Suzuki enters this match 1-0 over Takagi, having taken the NEVER Openweight Championship from him. We just saw Takagi lose to Suzuki’s bud Taichi, so the assumption I suppose was that Suzuki thought he could sleepwalk through this. The strike exchange at the opening bell is bad. Very bad. It looks like they’re trying to help each other wipe leftover food off of their faces. Things get better quickly though, as Suzuki works over Takagi’s arm, and Takagi has a hard time adapting without full lariat power. Suzuki got a couple of gnarly armbars that could have convincingly ended the match. The finish didn’t really make sense, however. Takagi catches Suzuki with a right hook, catches his breath, and then hits the Last of the Dragon for the win at 12:29. I don’t buy that the single punch stopped the wild momentum that Suzuki had at that point. That and the early striking were the only problem bits in an otherwise terrific little match, featuring amazing selling from Takagi. Most importantly, I’m impressed at how different it was than their first match. Takagi finishes the tournament with a rather pitiful score, but with a win over a title holder. That earns him a title match. ***¾ 

November 7, 2020 – Osaka, Osaka 

Shingo Takagi def. Minoru Suzuki {NEVER Openweight Championship Match}
From Power Struggle. Takagi came into this with his lower back taped up, so his arm was the least of his worries. Even still, Suzuki went for the arm early on. After some strong style stuff, Suzuki smartened up and went to work on the lower back. Takagi’s selling was wonderful, of course. I’m starting to feel sad that so little of his career up to this point showcased his amazing skill at performing an underdog role. He’s incredible at it. He fought through the pain and hit the Last of the Dragon for the win at 18:56. This had a much more engaging finish, even if it wasn’t the tour de force that their G1 match was. I’ll split the difference. ***¾ 

A rough tournament performance ended on a positive note for Takagi, and he enters the next phase with the NEVER belt back around his waist.