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Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima, or TenKoji, are a legacy tag team in Japan. They started teaming in late 1998 when Kojima joined Tenzan in nWo Japan, and have kept the team going for most of the 24 years since. There were periods when they didn’t team, like the first few years that Kojima was in All Japan. But even being contracted by rival companies couldn’t keep them apart, as they reformed and competed as a team many times in the second half of the ‘00s, while Kojima was an AJPW wrestler and Tenzan was in NJPW. They also famously wrestled each other in an IWGP/Triple Crown unification match in 2005. Over the decades they won the IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Championships six times, and had a run as the NWA World Tag Team Champions in 2014 while those titles were being defended in New Japan.
They were ranked number 104 on Cagematch and came in at number 89 on this list. This was a tricky tag team to cover. On Cagematch, their early (and arguably most important) run was unrepresented due to being underseen by Cagematch users. So I thought about doing something a bit different and reviewing two different sets of five matches: Their top 5 Cagematch matches, and then another set of matches that I decided are more historically significant. But NJPW World’s archive is very crappy and I wasn’t able to find most of the early matches I wanted to watch. I was able to find their first IWGP Tag Team Championship win, so I’m just having that replace what would have otherwise been the fifth ranked match.
January 4, 1999 – Tokyo, Japan
Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima def. Genichiro Tenryu & Shiro Koshinaka {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From NJPW Wrestling World (the precursor to Wrestle Kingdom). It’s hard to imagine the tag titles going second from the top at Wrestle Kingdom. Though the first WK alllll the way back in 2007 did feature a TenKoji match (no titles involved) in the main event, above the IWGP Championship match. Though that was a weird AJPW vs. NJPW political show and Taiyo Kea getting a shot at the NJ crown without having a chance in hell of winning it wouldn’t have made for an interesting main event. Anyway, Tenzan, along with partner Masahiro Chono, lost the belts to Tenryu & Koshinaka a few months earlier. Chono got injured and Keiji Mutoh took over nWo Japan. Mutoh and Tenzan failed to recapture the titles two months before this. Mutoh brought in Kojima, and now we have this. Kojima has the classic Tenzan haircut at this point, which is wild to me. After a strong start with everyone throwing blows that sounded like gunshots, things slowed way down as the babyfaces controlled the middle portion of the match. Or was nWo Japan a babyface stable? Either way, TenKoji got dominated for a long stretch and it silenced the crowd. Kojima got the biggest reactions of the match for his lariats, so I guess he was a fan favorite after all. Tenzan countered Koshinaka’s butt butt to a German suplex. He and Kojima hit a pair of aerial moves and then Tenzan put Koshinaka away with an ugly flying elbowdrop (feels like that was meant to be his headbutt) to give TenKoji their first tag titles at 16:35. When Tenryu & Koshinaka were in control, this died. When TenKoji was in control, it was wild. ***½
January 4, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima def. Keiji Mutoh & Shinjiro Ohtani
From Wrestle Kingdom 7. Speaking of the inaugural Wrestle Kingdom main event I mentioned in the last match, this was almost a rematch. That match was Mutoh and Chono teaming up to honor Shinya Hashimoto, who had passed away a year earlier. But the match is reportedly not very good, and it’s more about the Musketeer team, while this review is meant to highlight TenKoji. There wasn’t a ton to this match, but everyone seemed to be having a good time. The most notable moment for me was Ohtani chopping Tenzan and Kojima in the face one after the other. But the match ended poorly for him, as he fell victim to a 3D, Kojima’s lariat, and Tenzan’s moonsault. That gave TenKoji the win at 15:36. Mutoh contributed little more than a Shining Wizard and a few Dragon Screws, which isn’t so surprising considering he was replacing Ohtani’s intended partner, Daichi Hashimoto. ***¼
March 6, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan
Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima def. Tomohiro Ishii & Toru Yano {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From NJPW 45th Anniversary Show. I adored this match. I didn’t know anything about the CHAOS tag team, but after seeing this I’m shocked that they were only champs for two months. It’s smart not to let the act play out its welcome, but I can’t imagine that it was already getting stale after such a short period of time. Yano was tricky without being goofy, and with Ishii managed some very believable nearfalls. They put together a few combos that were worthy of Dragon Gate. TenKoji’s solutions to the problems laid out by the champions were very satisfying. Seeing Kojima shake off all the shenanigans and pummel Yano with the final lariat to win the titles at 12:28 had me geeked as hell. I love a match that has me expecting nothing going in and then surprises me. ***¾
April 9, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan
Hanson & Raymond Rowe def. Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima {IWGP Tag Team Championship Match}
From Sakura Genesis. This is a nice quirk of Cagematch’s TenKoji rankings; their sixth (and final) title win and subsequent loss come up next to each other in the hierarchy. TenKoji wrestled a smart match, going for pins on Rowe in positions where they knew Hanson would dive in for the save and then getting out of the way and causing friendly fire collisions. Aside from that, this wasn’t all that exceptional. Both teams put in a solid effort, but didn’t break out all that much to make the match memorable. Kojima fighting through the pain after a knee kick from Rowe got a good reaction, but the rest was typical War Machine stuff. Kojima fell to the Fallout at 14:06, giving the Americans the titles. ***¼
December 11, 2001 – Osaka, Osaka
Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima def. Jim Steel & Mike Barton {Tournament Finals}
From the G1 Tag League. For as decorated as the Smokin’ Gunns were, I didn’t expect to see Mike Barton show up in this series. Especially not post-Brawl for All. I have no idea who Steele is, but from what I can tell his career was a disaster outside of matches against TenKoji and a solid little run in All Japan. This is a rematch from a month earlier, so everyone is familiar with one another. It’s a match ten years ahead of its time, with Barton & Steele, two guys who are American lunks all the way, hitting huge moves but then moving incredibly quickly afterwards to keep the pace exciting. It took me a while to warm up to the match, but once I did (thanks in large part to the crowd ferociously cheering for TenKoji to overcome this big obstacle) it became a blast to see Barton wrestling like he actually knew what he was doing. And it wasn’t just things like Barton’s gorgeous, gigantic powerbomb, but more like him breaking up a pin on Steele and then continuing to hit Tenzan because why the hell not? He’s there and he’s not protecting himself. Tenzan hit Steele with the TTD and the moonsault for the win at 24:02. Kojima left for All Japan two months later, so the team was put on ice for a while. ****
I want to thank TenKoji for giving me great matches featuring Yano and Barton, two guys I never would have guessed I’d be marking out for.