YAMATO’s recent American run didn’t set my word on fire. But what about someone I haven’t seen wrestle much before?
September 9, 2022 – Newark, New Jersey
SB KENTo def. La Estrella
From ETU New History. I’ve never seen an Estrella match before. I would love it if Cagematch could get its act together and give this guy a profile page, as he’s been around for over a year now and has held the Triangle Gate Championship. There was a lot of indie bullshit in this match. I hope they got it all out of their system here. There was a lot of meaningless brawling around ringside, and a dive from the balcony by Estrella that made KENTo look like a tool. The rest of the match is quick action, all well-executed. KENTo puts on the SB Shooter for the win at 11:03. This was a Dragon Gate debut in America, the likes of their runs beginning in 2005 and 2009, but I’m hoping KENTo decides he wants to make a more significant splash for the rest of the tour. **½
September 17, 2022 – Raleigh, North Carolina
Shun Skywalker def. SB KENTo and Jack Evans {Triple Threat Match}
From DPW Victory Lap. This was meant to be the Dragon Gate guys vs. Evans & Andrew Everett, but Everett couldn’t work the show so it was changed to a triple threat. Evans started wrestling the year that KENTo was born. A bit of comedy kicks off the match, ending with Skywalker calling KENTo rude and breaking the alliance. The match was cartoonish and contrived, but the crowd was very into everyone’s personalities. Evans essentially wrestling a handicap match gave this a bit more of a unique flair than it might have otherwise had. And the final stretch of dives and finishers was a lot of fun. Evans missed a 630 senton, and Skywalker came back with the moonsault kneedrop and the SSW for the win at 11:25. ***¼
September 18, 2022 – Norcross, Georgia
Davey Richards def. SB KENTo {MLW National Openweight Championship Match}
From MLW Super Series. There wasn’t a lot to this, but it was entertaining nonetheless. I have to hand it to Richards, who makes a match more fun to watch by sheer force of his personality than most wrestlers who exert a lot more physical effort but have less in the way of a vibe. Richards was clearly interested in helping KENTo get over with MLW fans, and why wouldn’t he? He was winning in the end, after all. KENTo put up a good fight but not one that felt particularly dangerous for Richards. He got in a lot of offense and Richards sold it well, but there weren’t many near-falls for the Dragon Gate visitor. So Richards wound up selling a lot but coming out looking dominant anyway. GOod stuff. Richards hit a lariat and a brainbuster and then got the win with an anklelock at 9:59. ***¼
October 15, 2022 – Durham, North Carolina
SB KENTo def. BK Westbrook {Semifinal Match}
From DPW Carolina Classic. The winner of four first round matches go on to the finals of this very short tournament. Both guys went for cheap shots to start the match. I like it. I like all of this match actually, though it was a bit shorter than I would have liked. Both guys wrestled like rascally heels, which nine times out of ten is a win for the audience if they know what they’re doing. KENTo picked up the win with a sneaky low blow and a Ki Krusher at 7:54. I guess KENTo needed to keep his energy up for the main event. ***¼
Lucky Ali def. SB KENTo, Andrew Everett, and Mike Bailey {Number One Contender Elimination Match}
From the main event. Everett, whose knee was hurt, was eliminated first by Ali, who I’ve never seen before but by whom I’m already impressed. KENTo and Bailey fought each other in a very entertaining exchange. It ended with Bailey working through a shot to the nuts and hitting KENTo with a Spanish Fly for the elimination. The final stretch between Ali and Bailey was a lot of fun too. Ali kicked out Bailey’s Ultima Weapon and evaded the Flamingo Driver, then panicked and started looking for cheap wins. He wound up not needing it, however, picking up the win with a pair of Grand Lines at 17:54 (no thanks to the referee who got in the way of the action twice). The first bit with all four guys was a little too cute and contrived, but everything else was quite good. And I’ve found a new indie wrestler to like in Ali. ***½
October 23, 2022 – Columbus, Ohio
Alec Price def. SB KENTo
From GCW Moment of Clarity. The lighting is so bad on this show that I had to pump the brightness to max on my laptop to watch it. KENTo is making more out of his tour than any of the other Dragon Gate guys are, if you ask me. That’s made very evident in how over he is with this crowd. He’s shown a ton of personality and adds more unique flourishes to his matches than YAMATO or Skywalker have. Here, that comes in the form of no-selling some of Price’s strikes. So Price changes his gameplan and goes to what works for him more often: flying. He does an amazing job of that in this match and eventually incapacitates KENTo enough to hit the Surprise Kick for the win at 9:17. A would not be mad at a rematch between these two. ***¼
October 30, 2022 – Portland, Oregon
Kevin Blackwood def. SB KENTo
From Prestige Roseland 4: Wake the Dead. The production crew for this show read all the hate that Kevin Dunn gets online and said, “hold my beer.” The amount of too-cute cuts during this match made it infuriating to watch. It’s a shame too, because while this had all the usual lame hallmarks of a Blackwood match (no selling and mostly nonsensical lack of defense), the crowd was super hot for it. That was allowing me to get on my way to enjoying it more than a typical Blackwood match, but alas. Blackwood got the win with a brainbuster and a diving Cave In at 12:31. All in all, I’d say the joys of watching a KENTo match outweighed the irritants of watching a Blackwood match. ***
KENTo had a match on AEW Dark, but AEW has yet to stream it for whatever reason and I’m tired of waiting. So know that it happened and that he lost. He also wrestled and defeated LaBron Kozone in DPW, but I’m not reviewing it because it’s about eight minutes long, I don’t know how Kozone is, and I’m not doing another DPW free trial just to see that. I’m out of steam for mediocre matches.
November 19, 2022 – San Francisco, California
SB KENTo def. Kevin Blackwood {Semifinal Match}
From West Coast Pro and PWR King of the Indies. This was meant to be a quarterfinal match, but things changed later and I’ll explain why in the next match review. Of all the rematches we could have gotten on KENTo’s tour, this isn’t the one I would have asked for. The sound system at this show is trash. This had a lot of just-a-match energy. The action was spirited, but nothing built off of anything and the finish came out of nowhere. KENTo absorbed a big suplex from Blackwood and then rolled him up for the win at 9:29. **¾
Dragon Lee def. SB KENTo and Dralistico {Tournament Finals Triple Threat Match}
From later in the same show. Jacob Fatu had also qualified to be in this match but he got hurt during his first match and had to bow out. The semifinals were supposed to be a tag match pitting the four quarterfinal winners against each other, with the winning team squaring off in the finals. With Fatu out, the quarterfinals became the semifinals and they just decided to do a triple threat finals here. This was kind of sloppy and all over the place. No one sold anything, of course. I feel for them because this wasn’t what was planned, but also these three are more talented than this match would have you think. Lee hit KENTo with a running knee for the win at 12:18. **½
I’m less familiar with KENTo that I am with Skywalker or YAMATO, so his excursion was more interesting for me to watch. But it didn’t blow my mind at any point and it (the stretch I’m covering) ended rather disappointingly.