Let’s start by once again skipping the end of the year because New Japan doesn’t care about tag team wrestling and the Real World Tag League is irrelevant. New Japan’s goal in 2021 was to elevate three new wrestlers firmly into the top of the card: Shingo Takagi, Kota Ibushi, and Will Ospreay. After defeating Takagi in the G1 Climax Tournament, Ibushi went on to win the whole shabang. On the first night of Wrestle Kingdom 15, Ibushi beat Tetsuya Naito to win the IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental Championships. At that same event, Ospreay lost to Katsuhiko Okada. The following night, Takagi defended the NEVER Openweight Championship for the first time since winning it.
January 5, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Shingo Takagi def. Jeff Cobb {NEVER Openweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Kingdom 15. I’ve noticed that midcard and undercard Wrestle Kingdom rematches often get less time than the previous versions of said matchups. This is the opposite. This match is about as long as Takagi and Cobb’s previous two matches combined. Cobb was 2-0 over Takagi coming into this in consecutive G1 Climax matches. Right off the bat, this tapped into what I liked about their 2020 match. Cobb was ready to bulldoze Takagi with his size, but Takagi more quickly adapted and used the ropes and a low center of gravity to gain control. Cobb is undeterred, beating the crap out of Takagi. Takagi is forced to respond in kind, a tactic that didn’t work for him in the past. Takagi works the leg, which pays off after Cobb hits the Tour of the Islands but isn’t able to cover quickly enough because of the pain. The whole match is a rather gnarly fight, leaving Cobb with a bloody nose. A well-placed lariat and hard-fought suplex leads to the Pumping Bomber and the Last of the Dragon, giving Takagi the win at 21:11. That’s the best Cobb match I’ve seen by a big stretch. ****½
January 30, 2021 – Nagoya, Aichi
Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Shingo Takagi {NEVER Openweight Championship Match}
From The New Beginning. This is a dream match of mine. Pretty wild given the G1 and the other rampant opportunities for everyone to fight each other in singles matches that they were able to keep these two apart for over two years. Sadly, I was kind of disappointed in this. It felt stretched out and bloated. The action was quite slow for the first half of the match. Things got interesting once they started hobbling each other with focused attacks on each other’s legs. A cool moment saw Tanahashi almost make Takagi pass out with a Cloverleaf, only to make the error of dropping the hold and hitting the High Fly Flow to the back. That proved to do little more than knock Takagi’s cobwebs loose, as he was able to avoid a second High Fly Flow attempt. My enjoyment was halted when Takagi dropped Tanahashi on the top of his head with MADE IN JAPAN. Not sure how he’s still alive. Has Tanahashi’s neckbreaker always been called the Twist and Shout? It’s annoying to hear Kevin Kelly say those words over and over again. Anyway, the finish of this was irritating to me too. After all that long, slow work throughout the bulk of the match, it turns into the same finisher trading we always get at the end. Takagi hit most of his finishers put couldn’t put the finishing touches on Tanahashi. Then, Tanahashi countered the Last of the Dragon to the Sling Blade before hitting a dragon suplex. Then he hit the High Fly Flow, despite Takagi being very lucid and mobile, laying there in anticipation of the move anyway. That won Tanahashi the title at 35:40. How people at the time fell over themselves to praise this match is beyond me. Huge disappointment from my point of view. ***
On March 4, Kota Ibushi unified the Heavyweight and Intercontinental Championships to form the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship. The title’s lineage was restarted, ending 34 years of history. I still do not understand why they did this. The title had undergone physical changes three times before, so why should the new belt design require an entirely new lineage? Maybe one day they’ll rectify this mistake. The winner of the New Japan would go on to be Ibushi’s first challenger.
March 6, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Shingo Takagi def. Kazuchika Okada {Opening Round Match}
From the New Japan Cup. I so rarely prefer Okada matches to Tanahashi matches, but this was so much more economical than Takagi’s NEVER loss in January. Unlike their first meeting in the previous year’s G1 Climax, Takagi was able to suffer through the Money Clip and recover rather completely. He avoided the Rainmaker entirely and kicked out of Okada’s sunset flip cutback. He hit most of his signature repertoire and finished Okada off with the Last of the Dragon at 23:58. This didn’t feel as engaging as their G1 match, but it moved at a good pace for a tournament opener. I quite enjoyed it, as it’s a very high floor as far as match ups between these two go. ***¾
March 13, 2021 – Nagoya, Aichi
Shingo Takagi def. Hirooki Goto {Second Round Match}
From the New Japan Cup. Kevin Kelly is doing commentary on his own and it’s awkward and I don’t care for it. This had the same great energy as their previous three matches, but like the Okada match it was missing that something extra to make it truly memorable. It didn’t have the novelty of seeing two amazingly compatible wrestlers go at it for the first time, it didn’t have the Goto comeback story of their second match, and it didn’t have the subversive finish of their third match. But these two are incapable of putting in a snoozer against each other, so we got a quality, hard-hitting outing. Takagi put Goto away with the Pumping Bomber and a perfunctory Last of the Dragon at 23:51. ***½
March 16, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan
Shingo Takagi def. KENTA {Quarterfinal Match}
From the New Japan Cup. It’s astonishing that these two had never fought one-on-one before. Despite being in Dragon Gate and NOAH, respectively, they’re the same age and their careers were on a similar trajectory. Plus, their tag team match from 2008 is still well regarded, and the most memorable thing about it is the final stretch between Takagi and KENTA. So yeah, dream match level anticipation despite KENTA’s slightly diminished reputation in recent years. The most notable spot in this match, Takagi’s DDT reversal, was executed in such a way that it didn’t really translate. The fact that this had the exact same finish as Takagi’s previous tournament match also didn’t really work for me. What did work for me was KENTA’s cheating early on and the way he mocked Takagi’s main pose. Beyond that though, this didn’t hit the heights it probably would have 14 years ago. KENTA was in control much of the match, and while I enjoyed his dickish offense, Takagi’s comeback didn’t happen until too close to the finish for it to be satisfying. The Pumping Bomber and the Last of the Dragon won it for Takagi at 23:47. ***¼
March 21, 2021 – Sendai, Miyagi
Shingo Takagi def. EVIL {Semifinal Match}
From the New Japan Cup. Kevin Kelly SAVAGES Dick Togo (EVIL’s second) on commentary, saying he’d be scraping it out on nothing indies if not for EVIL. Damn. I didn’t mind the interference, which is a thing that I guess bothers a lot of NJPW fans when it comes to EVIL and the Bullet Club in general, on its face. It had the potential to be interesting, and because I don’t watch full NJPW cards I don’t see a lot of it. But Togo’s interference didn’t lead to any near falls because the referee was on the floor for all of it. I guess because there’s less gaga in New Japan they haven’t figured out how to do it well through trial and error. The rest of the match was alright. I liked early on that EVIL had Takagi’s offense scouted because they used to be teammates. But in the end that didn’t really go anywhere. I suppose it was reversed when Takagi blocked a low blow in dramatic fashion, but that came after Takagi came back from behind with a double clothesline as if it was nothing. He followed the low blow block with a headbutt, the Pumping Bomber, and the Last of the Dragon for the win at 22:43. WIll Ospreay, his tournament finals opponent, attacks him after the match, but Takagi fights him off. ***¼
March 21, 2021 – Sendai, Miyagi
Will Ospreay def. Shingo Takagi {Number One Contender Match}
From the finals of the New Japan Cup. Takagi’s back is all taped up coming into this, so early on, Ospreay hits a backdrop onto the guardrail. Gnarly. He also utilized Bea Priestly well to cheat in the first half of the match. Takagi spent that time targeting Ospreay’s vulnerable nose. It helped hammer home that Takagi was the babyface that champion Kota Ibushi was on commentary cheering him on in the face of Ospreay’s cheating. Near the end of the match, Takagi does a zombie version of Hulking Up. It’s pretty neat, sold almost completely by Ospreay’s exasperated reaction to it. Takagi started running through his finisher repertoire, but Ospreay was onto it. He countered the Pumping Bomber to a Spanish Fly and then hit the Hidden Blade and the Stormbreaker for the win at 30:06. This drew me in way more than their 2020 match did, but didn’t quite reach the heights of their 2019 match. I imagine if there were fans who could make verbal noise in the crowd that it would have exceeded their junior tournament match. ****¼
Ospreay went on to defeat Ibushi for the IWGP WH title on April 4th. Takagi came out to be his first challenger. On what grounds? No idea. Ospreay had just defeated him, and their record was already 2-1 in favor of Ospreay.
May 4, 2021 – Fukuoka, Fukuoka
Will Ospreay def. Shingo Takagi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestling Dontaku. Kevin Kelly on commentary: “Shingo Takagi did not leave the comfort of Dragon Gate to come here and become just a guy.” Don’t tell the Shingo Takagi of late 2022 that that’s the case. This is the longest match in the history of the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, even to this date (December 2022), and the 10th longest including both previous IWGP Heavyweight Championship lineages. And I just don’t think they had enough to fill the whole thing. Their 30-minute match the month before was the perfect length for them. For the first 25 minutes of this match I was entertained, but nothing at all happened that felt like either guy was actually trying to put the other away. Even by clapping crowd standards, this one was quiet. About 30 minutes in Takagi hit MADE IN JAPAN through a pair of tables and then started going for the killzz. I figured that would wake up the crowd, but the claps remained somewhat sparse. That very much blunted their attempts to do an “epic” strike exchange near the end of the match. But as I said, this was entertaining, if not exhilarating. Takagi bouncing a resting Ospreay off the ropes to hit the Pumping Bomber was very cool. Ospreay finished Takagi with the Hidden Blade and the Storm Breaker at 44:53. Kelly calls this the best wrestling match he’s ever seen, and it seems like a lot of NJPW fans shared in that sentiment. That’s insane and all I can do is throw my hands up. This also needed more Bea Priestley, but I think she’d already stopped appearing in Japan anticipation of her NXT UK review. ***¼
Ospreay sustained a neck injury in the match and needed time off to heal. He had been slated to defend the title a few weeks later against Okada at Wrestle Grand Slam, but he was injured and the show wound up being postponed anyway because of a COVID surge in Japan. So the title was vacated and a match was made for Dominion for the vacant title, where the number one contender squared off against the guy who put the former champ on the shelf.
June 7, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka
Shingo Takagi def. Kazuchika Okada {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 13th NJPW Dominion. I wrote this review a year and a half ago when it happened. Takagi and Okada were 1-1 in singles matches going into this. In the lead up to this match, Okada said that this title is cursed, as witnessed by Ospreay’s injury and Ibushi losing in his first defense. He also says that it was the last title that cursed this title for breaking off from its lineage. That’s amazing. Also amazing is how much more expressive Takagi is now than when I was watching him actively 15 years ago. The look of surprise and then fear in his eyes when Okada choked him was great, as was his last gasp lunge toward the ropes. He had a similar look of surprise when the Last Dragon got him the win at 36:01. I think all of us mid aught indie/Dragon Gate fans feel very validated today, even if Takagi failed upwards to get into this position. ****¼
This was the first time since 2003 that three men became IWGP (World) Heavyweight Champion for the first time, in a row and in a calendar year. The years 2002 and 2003 actually saw five first-time champions in a row crowned, which is an achievement that NJ decided not to try to replicate. But we’ll get to that in the next review.