Shingo Takagi: Champion Dragon

We finally get to mid-2021, Shingo Takagi’s peak position during his New Japan run so far.

July 25, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Hiroshi Tanahashi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Grand Slam in Tokyo Dome. This was supposed to be Ibushi challenging for the title, but he got pneumonia so Tanahashi took his place at the 11th hour. Dang, they had a French commentary option for this one. They claimed 5,000 fans were in attendance for this show, and I guess you could make the argument that the Dome looks one-tenth full, but I’d be surprised if that attendance number was real based on what I’m looking at here. Granted, it’s a COVID precaution issue not a drawing power issue. This match had the intensity that I felt was missing from their NEVER Openweight Championship match. Though it was long, it never lagged. Takagi in particular kept things moving in the moments when the match might have paused or otherwise become uninteresting. And then, Kevin Kelly went and compared Tanahashi’s comeback near the end to the United States hockey team beating Russia in 1980. How is a guy who had been champion eight times before this going to be compared to the greatest underdogs in hockey history? What an odd time to break out that analogy. After a match that I can comfortably call epic, Takagi blocked the High Fly Flow and hit the STAY DREAM, then a lariat, and then the Last of the Dragon for the win at 37:26. ****¼  

The night before, EVIL beat Tomohiro Ishii in a singles match, and a few nights later, he & Dick Togo beat Takagi * & BUSHI in a tag match. That was enough to earn him a title shot.  

September 5, 2021 – Tokorozawa, Saitama 

Shingo Takagi def. EVIL {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestle Grand Slam in MetLife Dome. Takagi last beat EVIL in the New Japan Cup tournament in a solid match. This was a good bit longer than that match. There was a very funny bit early on in this match where timekeeper Makoto Abe kept finding himself as collateral damage as the wrestlers whipped each other into his table. Another funny bit saw Red Shoes refuse deliberately look away when EVIL would go for a pin early on, in the same direction that EVIL forced him to face so that he wouldn’t see House of Torture’s blatant interference. I was also amused by the ridiculous human chain that HoT formed to help EVIL get more leverage on an abdominal stretch. Do I like House of Torture? And if so, am I the only one? The timekeeper bit gets a callback when Takagi makes EVIL sit at the table and then rams his teammates into him. This is an underrated great comedy match. HoT disappear for a bit, but they come back at a pivotal moment to beat Takagi up real bad. LIJ ran out to even the odds, but this portion went on too long and my mind began to drift. Without EVIL’s cronies, Takagi rather easily wins the match in almost the exact same fashion that he won their first match. He blocked a low blow, and then hit the Pumping Bomber and the Last of the Dragon for the win at 30:20. I liked this a lot more than I thought I would. ***½ 

September 18, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka 

Shingo Takagi def. Tomohiro Ishii {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. Takagi was 2-1 over Ishii going into this, though they were tied in G1 matches. I prefer those G1 matches to their match for the NEVER Openweight Championship, so I hoped this would continue that trend. It did not. It wasn’t for lack of effort, but aside from elbowing and clotheslining each other real hard, there wasn’t a lot to this. They were also feverishly devoted to sticking to whatever plan they came into the match with, regardless of whether or was working out between them or whether the crowd was into it. That resulted in a ref bump that didn’t lead to anything and a botched spot out of the corner that needed to be repeated. Once the spot didn’t go as planned and Ishii feigned a shoulder injury to explain it, it would have been impressive to see them call an audible and make the match about that shoulder. Instead, nothing came of it. Takagi hit the Last of the Dragon for the win at 27:56. Perfectly good as a main event, not so much compared to their excellent matches in the past. ***½ 

September 23, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan 

Zach Sabre Jr. def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. These won the 2009 wXw 16 Carat Gold Tournament, defeating Sabre along the way. This is the first match between the two since then. The commentators talk about the wXw match quite a bit, which is nice. Takagi was overconfident early on here, seemingly outmaneuvering the mat expert Sabre and capping off exchanges with power moves. But Sabre rather quickly took control and zeroes in on Takagi’s arm and shoulder. Even when Takagi was able to get in the driver’s seat, he never had the ability to make pins after hitting his offense because his arm hurt too much. That remained the case for the rest of the match. Sabre won the thing by twice blocking the Last of the Dragon and putting on a triangle choke for the submission victory at 27:17. This was an amazing way to keep Takagi strong, but show that he’s not invincible and would have to figure out what went wrong against Sabre in order to not lose the title to him in the inevitable rematch. ****

September 26, 2021 – Kobe, Hyogo 

Shingo Takagi def. Yuji Nagata.
From the G1 Climax but not a tournament match. I originally hadn’t planned on reviewing this as this post is already going to be long, but to date it’s the only singles match between these two legends. This is happening because Takagi’s tournament opponent Tetsuya Naito was injured and forfeited their tournament match, but that doesn’t mean that the champ would be getting the night off. Nagata had retired from G1 Tournament competition because he felt he’d lost too many steps to be able to string together enough wins to be effective in it. But he wanted to prove that he could beat the champ in a one-off. He could not. I can’t say that they phoned this in, but I can say that it was quite one-dimensional. They never caught the crowd’s attention. They hit each other hard, but it didn’t amount to much. It was a slightly less exciting version of Takagi’s match against Ishii. He picked up the win with the Last of the Dragon at 16:51. After the match, Takagi says he still wants to wrestle his friend Naito. ***¼ 

September 30, 2021 – Tokyo, Japan

Shingo Takagi def. KENTA {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. Takagi beat KENTA earlier in the year in the New Japan Cup, the only other singles match between them. It was good, not great. Takagi’s arm was banged up because of the Sabre match, and KENTA went after it right away. That worked really well for him, especially as he exposed one of the turnbuckles and used it as a weapon against the arm. Things got worse for Takagi when KENTA hit a hanging DDT on the floor. Later on, KENTA did this stupid thing where he draped a chair over Takagi’s arm and then hit that chair with a chair. Why put a shield over the injured body part before hitting it? Either do the spot in a way that makes sense (hitting the mat with most of the chair in a way that looks like you’re hitting the arm) or don’t do it at all. Moments later, KENTA looks silly again as Takagi decides that the pain in his arm isn’t that bad actually and hits him with a bunch of lariats and elbows before ramming his head into the exposed turnbuckle and hitting the Last of the Dragon for the win at 23:56. Though this was structured just like their New Japan Cup match (a structure I didn’t care for), I was enjoying this more because of the focus on the arm. But then that chair spot took me out of it. On the other hand, I like that the exposed turnbuckle bit KENTA in the end. Split the difference and I guess it’s as good as their first match. ***¼  

October 3, 2021 – Nagoya, Aichi 

Kota Ibushi def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. Takagi was 1-0 over Ibushi going into this match. Just like in their first match, this saw 15 minutes of action that didn’t really lead anywhere before Ibushi finally decided to do something with any focus. A couple kicks at Takagi’s arm fired up the champ and made him come back with elbows. From there, Takagi took most of th rest of the match and looked like he’d seal things up easily. But Ibushi did to Takagi what Takagi did to Ibushi the previous year and cut off his comeback to win somewhat suddenly after hitting a series of Kamagoye’s and pinning the champion at 23:57. It drives me up the wall that Takagi has set match presets against certain opponents. This worked for me less than their first match did. The result kinda makes you wonder if Ibushi was meant to recapture the title from Takagi months earlier had he not gotten ill, or if he would have won the title in the inevitable rematch that never wound up happening. It will probably be quite some time before these two wrestle again, if ever, as Ibushi wrestled his last match in  New Japan a couple weeks later and actually took a year and a half off from the ring before returning last month in GCW of all places. ***¼ 

October 7, 2021 – Hiroshima, Hiroshima 

Shingo Takagi def. Toru Yano {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. Though he beat Yano quickly in the 2019 G1 Climax, Takagi’s first win over Yano did not come without difficulty. This match was the same. Yano convinced Takagi to blind himself with a sack at the top of the match and got a near fall and a near count out off of that. A few more tricks kept Yano alive longer than he did the first time around, but not much longer. Takagi was able to get Yano’s shirt over his head and hit the Last of the Dragon for the win at 8:17. Cute and inoffensive. **     

October 9, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka 

Shingo Takagi def. Tanga Loa {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax.This was consistent, but very uninspired compared to even the more predictable matches Takagi has had in this tournament. Loa’s no-selling could have been what set this apart, but he doesn’t seem to understand how to get the crowd excited for his no-selling, so it winds up looking like a 1980s stiff forgetting that his opponent’s offense is meant to hurt. Not great. The way he got into position for Takagi’s GTR took me all the way out of the match because it looked so cooperative. And it couldn’t have happened at a worse time, because the perfunctory finish happened seconds later when Takagi hit a heatless Last of the Dragon for the win at 19:08. **¾ 

October 13, 2021 – Sendai, Miyagi 

Shingo Takagi def. Great-O-Khan {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax. GOK brought some fun, unorthodox offense to this match, though it went way too long given what was on offer between these two. They lost the crowd at several points and struggled to get a critical mass of claps going. Takagi was having trouble matching GOK’s power, so he started working the arm with some success. But then he abandoned that because all of his finishes in the G1 have to be the same. Which is to say, he has to hit MADE IN JAPAN, the Pumping Bomber, and the Last of the Dragon. The way he hit MADE IN JAPAN was interesting, but then the rest was paint by numbers. He finished off GOK at 25:50. At this point, even the matches that are a little different are starting to feel rote. I’m not enamored with Takagi’s overall performance in the tournament this year. He’s the champion; pretty good shouldn’t be the norm. ***¼ 

I’m skipping Takagi’s final tournament match against Yujiro Takahashi because it probably sucks. It ended in a double count out, which frankly is a really stupid booking decision. Had Takagi won the match, he’d finish tied for first place in the block with eventual winner Ibushi. But Ibushi already beat Takagi in the tournament, so the finals between Ibushi and Kazuchika Okada would have happened either way. This just gave terrible Takahashi a draw against Takagi and I hate it. 

November 6, 2021 – Osaka, Osaka 

Shingo Takagi def. Zach Sabre Jr. {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Power Struggle. This Sabre character is pretty good. No wonder they were getting ready to create a title specifically so he’d have something to do on more shows. I don’t agree with that lazy method of using him, but I get why it happened. In the first half of the match, Takagi got obliterated because he wouldn’t deviate from his usual strategy. Sabre was all over him, reversing his typical offense from different angles and embarrassing the champ in the ropes. Takagi’s only success game from defense counters to Sabre’s holds. Around 15 minutes in he was able to slow Sabre down with a neckbreaker, which eventually allowed him to slowly sneak in a few of his high-momentum strikes. Sabre got close to getting Takagi to submit to the triangle choke, but Takagi fell into the ropes. Another attempt at the triangle was countered to the Last of the Dragon, but Takagi was too wiped to get the pin. Sabre twice countered the Last of the Dragon after that, but Takagi tricked him into position to hit the GTR, and then finished him off with a short arm lariat and the Last of the Dragon at 30:27. Their G1 tournament match was great, and this blew it out of the water. ****½ 

For all intents and purposes, this marked the end of Takagi’s IWGP World Heavyweight Championship run, as he was about to come up against Kazuchika Okada, New Japan’s brick wall.