I was originally going to post one big review of YAMATO, SB KENTo, and Shun Skywalker’s excursions. But it’s just too many matches for one post so they all get a separate look. All three excursions occurred in the fall of 2022. Keep an eye out for the others when MLW eventually streams their matches.
October 8, 2022 – Atlantic City, New Jersey
Tony Deppen def. YAMATO
From GFW Fight Club, Night 1. I’m not saying that Deppen isn’t good or worthy of going over YAMATO, but I am saying that the way in which he went over makes me wonder how YAMATO and Dragon Gate became so diminished that this could happen. YAMATO, who was the next challenger for the Dream Gate Championship when this match happened, had a very short back and forth with Deppen here and then lost to a Tombstone Piledriver at 8:37 suddenly and out of nowhere in rather short order. The action was solid, but also this is backwards booking. Now when YAMATO wins on the following night, the local guy he loses to will have lost to a loser. They should have gone with the Skywalker formula. ***
October 8, 2022 – San Francisco, California
Bryan Keith def. Ben-K
From WCPW Ride the Lightning. I’m dying to know how Ben-K wound up on this show given that it’s his only American wrestling appearance ever and he worked zero other North American around it. He’s also in YAMATO’s High End group, and since I’m not going to do a whole review just for his match (and frankly I can’t even be bothered to do a pop up), I’ll just slot this in here. He’s wearing the Ryuo Championship that he won a week earlier. That’s the main title for Ryukyu Dragon Pro Wrestling, a company run by Gurukun Mask. By the way, if anyone has a line on where I can get a Gurukun Mask, I need and desperately want one. He’s also Mr. T now, which I was not aware of. There wasn’t much to this match. Ben-K was doing a kind of arch villain thing, but fortunately didn’t let that completely overwhelm his typical hard-hitting style. Keith worked his typical good match, but there was nothing here to lose your mind over. Keith hit a knee kick out of nowhere and hit the Emerald Tiger Driver for the win at 11:03. ***
October 9, 2022 – Atlantic City, New Jersey
YAMATO def. Mike Bailey
From GCW Fight Club, Night 2 I just noticed that the referee has an earpiece in. Is GCW deluding itself into thinking the production team needs a direct line to the ref on this show? This was a well-fought match, the kind I’ve come to expect from both guys. It wasn’t brain-melting, but the energy they kept up throughout the match was good. YAMATO countered the Flamingo Driver to a sleeper suplex and then hit a hurricanrana, and enziguiri, and the Galleria for the win at 15:13. Again, Bailey lost to a guy who had just lost, so this was the worst case scenario for an American talent as it relates to YAMATO’s time in GCW. ***¼
October 14, 2022 – Chicago, Illinois
YAMATO def. Zachary Wentz {Opening Round Match}
From AAW Jim Lynam Memorial Tournament, Night 1. Wentz actually has a televised win over YAMATO in a trios match in Dragon Gate from 2018. And since we can’t be having YAMATO with a losing record against guys who dress up like nazis, he wins here. This was the energy I wish YAMATO had brought to all of his matches during this excursion. The match was very fast-paced, and felt like it went by in a flash. I wonder if YAMATO would have kept it up had there been five more minutes of it. Wentz was in control near the end, even hitting YAMATO with the Galleria. But YAMATO caught him with the hurricanrana for the win at 9:43. ***
October 15, 2022 – Chicago, Illinois
Fred Yehi def. YAMATO {Quarterfinal Match}
From AAW Jim Lynam Memorial Tournament, Night 2. There was a lot to like in this match. I guess YAMATO felt like bringing some effort this weekend. Yehi’s style is very aggressive, and it complimented YAMATO’s moveset well. I loved YAMATO’s counter from Yehi’s choke to an anklelock. I’ve never seen anything like that before. I also loved Yehi’s finisher, using the Koji Clutch but also rolling around the ring with the hold on punching YAMATO’s face after he lost his grip on YAMATO’s body. There were little touches all over this match that made an otherwise small outing a memorable one. That Koji Clutch made YAMATO tap out at 12:24. ***½
October 22, 2022 – Detroit Michigan
Jonathan Gresham def. YAMATO
From GCW Drop Dead. This had a nice, fast pace and was wrestled with some intensity. But then near the end of the match they dropped a lot of that intensity in favor of an indie, goofy vibe. It wasn’t overboard, but YAMATO thought he got the winning pin off of a roll up and then complained about it quite a bit rather than press the action forward. And then Gresham exploited that to get a roll up for the win at 15:46. I’ve come to terms with the fact that YAMATO is not going to be hitting his third gear on this tour. ***¼
October 23, 2022 – Columbus, Ohio
YAMATO def. Blake Christian
From GCW Moment of Clarity. Christian did something in this match that I find so annoying; he sold his leg only to then immediately do high flying acrobatics that required him to land on the bad leg that he’s selling. So either it doesn’t hurt, or it hurts and you’re a moron who can’t adjust his plan, and either way I lose interest in what you’re doing. Why would I want to watch a dumb heel? It turns out he was being dumb, because YAMATO catches him with the hurricanrana for the win (at 12:47) a minute after his big dive onto his bad leg. At this point I have to ask, with YAMATO losing exactly half of his matches on this tour, what am I supposed to think is the point of his matches? He’s wrestled four times in GCW and the commentators have given me no sense of why he’s there or what he’s after. And his middling (kayfabe) performance has him stuck in the midcard just having matches for the sake of them. I’m not into it. This match was fine but made me feel nothing. ***
October 29, 2022 – Los Angeles, California
YAMATO def. Jordan Oliver
From GCW Hit ‘Em Up.Oliver made me smile late in the match by selling his injured leg after stupidly doing a taunt during which he stomped the mat. Love it. YAMATO made me smile by being more of a dirtbag heel than a Casanova heel. I enjoy the change of pace. Oliver’s bum leg left him unable to sustain any comeback, and YAMATO was able to put him down with the hurricanrana and the sleeper into the Galleria at 15:26. A very good performance from both guys. ***½
October 30, 2022 – Portland, Oregon
Alex Shelley def. YAMATO {Prestige Championship Match}
From Prestige Roseland 4: Wake the Dead. The YouTube wrestling nerd who is on commentary for this show does a lot of things that I find very annoying. For one thing, he refers to Bryan Danielson as AmDrag, something that’s entirely too online for my sensibilities. He also talks about the wrestlers’ “real life” jobs. In my opinion, it’s the job of a wrestling commentator to help the viewer suspend disbelief. Telling me what a wrestler does for a living doesn’t work against that, but telling me that said job is real life implies that what I’m watching in the ring is not real life. So don’t do that. I was also annoyed for much of the match that YAMATO was still doing his breezy, “I’m handsome and not too concerned with my opponent,” shtick, especially because he had the chance to win a title here. But then the Shelley turned that on him and made him work for his win. And then YAMATO didn’t get the win at all because Shelley started unloading with combinations of moves that overwhelmed the visiting challenger. And given the way YAMATO looked shocked and then disoriented by the end of the match, it gave the journey to get there a satisfying feeling. I’d say this was easily YAMATO’s best match from the tour, and the only one worth seeking out. Shelley got the win with a pair of Shellshocks and the Border City Stretch at 19:18. ***¾
It took him a while to get really motivated, but YAMATO finished off his tour with a pair of worthwhile matches. He then went back to Japan and vie for Dragon Gate’s top prize having lost half of his American matches to almost-famous indie guys (and Tony Deppen). Dragon Gate must have been banking on nobody in Japan following any of this stuff. YAMATO is set to return to the States soon, but I’m done watching him go at half speed half the time.