Shingo Takagi: Ascending Dragon

Why would I title this Ascending Dragon if we last left Takagi at the top of the New Japan mountain? You won’t have to wait long to find out.

December 4, 2021 – Kofu, Yamanashi 

Shingo Takagi def. Ryohei Oiwa
From NJPW World Tag League. This match is completely unimportant, but we so rarely see Takagi against rookies so why not? I’ve been skipping the intros quite a bit, so Takagi’s three-quarter mask with whiskers is kind of blowing my mind here. There’s not much to this, as I expected, but it was nice to see the champion treat someone below his level in the manner of a champion wrestling someone below his level. Oiwa was green as hell, but not bad; just very limited. Takagi doing casual push ups to power out of a Boston Crab was fun, and then he put on a Boston Crab of his own for the win at 10:18. **½ 

January 4, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Kazuchika Okada def. Shingo Takagi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 16. For me, this match (and the following night’s main event match) and a case of me fantasy booking a more interesting storyline in my head and being disappointed by the real life execution. The whole gimmick of the weekend is that Okada and Will Ospreay are pretender champions. Okada, who vocally hated that the IWGP Heavyweight title lineage was reset when Kota Ibushi defeated Tetsuya Naito, requested that he be awarded the previous title belt when he won the G1 Climax. Ospreay, who was never pinned for his title but had to vacate it due to injury, was running around the world carrying his own version of Takagi’s title and calling himself the true champion. For me, a satisfying story would have been the two pretenders fighting each other first with the winner getting the title shot against Takagi. But that’s not how NJPW works and now we get the G1 winner and the champion fighting to see who would face the pretender on night two. Meh. This was quite good, but the expressiveness that Takagi showed in his title win was only available in small spurts here. It pulled me back into the match when I felt the call of my ADD around the 20-minute mark, but then we didn’t see much of that in the final stretch. What we did see was Takagi doing anything and everything to avoid the Rainmaker, which was dope. But we also saw Okada basically be impervious to all of Takagi’s offense. That stole a bit of the drama from the match for me. All in all I was left feeling that this was technically great without much of an emotional draw. Okada landed the Rainmaker for the win at 35:44. The following night, Takagi was relegated to a pre-show match. Brutal. ****

January 8, 2022 – Yokohama, Kanagawa 

Shingo Takagi, Tetsuya Naito, SANADA, Hiromu Takahashi & BUSHI def. Katsuhiko Nakajima, Kenoh, Manabu Soya, Aleja & Tadasuke
From NJPW/NOAH Wrestle Kingdom 16. Kevin Kelly goes harsh right off the bat, saying that the luster of this match is blunted because Takagi lost his title to Okada. Damn, Kev. Takagi comes out before Naito, just to hammer home that without the title Takagi is not the top guy in the group. Kenoh was GHC National Champion and Nakajima was GHC Heavyweight Champion at this point. Given that, I’m quite surprised that Kongo lost. Kongo’s entrance is awesome. They do an anime-inspired post, with Nakajima just barely in the frame sitting on the turnbuckle. So much style it should be illegal. I’ve been stoked to watch this because it’s a super fresh matchup. Well, Takagi vs. Nakajima is not fresh, but it’s been over a decade since their matches in Dragon Gate and Kensuke Office (and almost two decades since they first squared off) that it feels fresh. Nakajima is very pleased that Naito decided to start the match against him, a chance to get revenge for a G1 Climax loss in 2016. Kongo quickly used their numbers (they had a couple guys on the floor) to gain the advantage. Reminded me a lot of Dragon Gate heel stable stuff. It would have helped me a lot to know whether or not (I suspect not) this was being wrestled under Dragon Gate/lucha style tag rules, because by the end the tag structure was thrown out the window. That was annoying, but there was a lot to like here. Soya and SANADA had a nice exchange, playing off of their tag team days in All Japan. Kenoh was the real star, spazzing out against Takagi and especially against Naito. After things got super fast (and lost the narrative thread), Takagi hit Tadasuke with the Pumping Bomber and the Last of the Dragon for the win in front of a subdued crowd at 26:33. Nakajima motioned that Takagi should come after his title, but sadly their singles match wound up happening after Nakajima dropped the belt. ***½

March 7, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Tomohiro Ishii {Opening Round Match}
From the New Japan Cup. This again. Talk about being spoiled but I’m so over this pairing. Takagi was up 3-1 in their series leading up to this and there was no reason to think Ishii would start evening things up. Which is kind of lame, because they could have done more to express that Takagi was building his way back to the top after his title loss. Takagi’s entrance gear is said to be an Umaga to several Japanese wrestling legends. Kelly runs down how long all of Takagi and Ishii’s matches were; what’s the point of that? What does it indicate that they were all somewhat long? Kelly doesn’t tell us. A statistic for statistics’ sake is dorky. There was a bit I liked early on when Ishii was very much inside Takagi’s head, dominating him in the corner and allowing no quarter. But then Takagi quickly came back and the match turned into their usual outing. The commentary goes off the rails as they say that the crowd claps for both guys equally, not for either guy. First, that’s neutral Marge Simpson hoping everyone just has a good time energy, and second, how can you know who is being clapped for? No one can audibly state who they like during this wordless period of New Japan fandom. This had a good pace, but broke little new ground. I liked it about as much as their last match, which was already showing diminishing returns from their previous two. Takagi hits his usual for the win at 23:32. ***½

March 13, 2022 – Amagasaki, Hyogo 

Shingo Takagi def. Tanga Loa {Second Round Match}
From the New Japan Cup. Another rematch that doesn’t thrill me. And clearly thrilling wasn’t what these two set out to do. They had a perfectly acceptable midcard match in which Loa got to jaw jack a bit and then mostly get his ass kicked. He got one convincing near fall off of a very nice looking powerbomb. Takagi came back with a Pumping Bomber for the win at 12:31. Love to see Takagi win with something other than the Last of the Dragon. Takagi shows Loa respect after the match, which goes a lot farther than Kelly saying on commentary that this was almost an upset when that never felt to be the case. ***

March 18, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Chase Owens {Third Round Match}
From the New Japan Cup. Fresh matchup! The gimmick here is that both guys promised to win this match in under five minutes. Neither comes close, though Owens attacking before the opening bell at least played into the claim. He’s able to control Takagi for longer than I’d otherwise find believable by targeting the neck with terrific focus. Takagi stops the assault ten minutes into the match with a Death Valley Driver on the floor. Injured, he tries to win by count out (very rare for him), but Owens beats the count at 19. Takagi sells the neck with every offensive maneuver, unable to make a cover and shaking in pain. Owens is onto him, so Takagi bangs his own head against the turnbuckle to psych his opponent out. He’s still in trouble, but some crafty limb-catching allows him to hit MADE IN JAPAN. Owens pulls out every trick he’s got, changing his plan on the fly when Takagi proves difficult to hit with the Package Piledriver. A final try for said finisher is countered by a hurricanrana, and Takagi follows that with the Pumping Bomber and Last of the Dragon for the win at 16:41. I expected nothing out of Owens as his reputation is middling at best, but he and Takagi put on a marvelous show. Most of that was Takagi’s performance, but Owens held up his end of the bargain completely. ****

March 21, 2022 – Nagaoka, Niigata 

Shingo Takashi def. Hiromu Takahashi {Quarterfinal Match}
From the New Japan Cup. I haven’t reviewed many Takagi tag matches as part of this career retrospective, but I have reviewed a few and I think it’s odd that he hasn’t teamed with Takahashi in any of them. Takagi’s hair kind of matches Takahashi’s pants. This was always entertaining, but took its sweet time kicking into high gear. There were spurts of tense action on the floor, but the fight in the ring didn’t feel like it was part of the story until the final six minutes or so. At that point, an exhausted Takahashi pulled out everything he had, only to be stifled by Takagi at every turn. Takahashi strung a few strikes and head drops together, but Takagi put an end to that little run with his GTR. The Pumping Bomber and the Last of the Dragon finished Takahashi at 23:43. I liked that Takahashi got in one last burst of life between those two moves, and I like that Takagi dominated a solid majority of the match. Ultimately though, I expected more from this. Hopefully the next time they fight, Takahashi can get a couple of believable near falls to crank up the drama. ***½

March 26, 2022 – Osaka, Osaka 

Zack Sabre Jr. def. Shingo Takagi {Semifinal Match}
From the New Japan Cup. If someone were to tell me that Sabre is the greatest living wrestler, I wouldn’t argue with them too much. Maybe a little. During the Takahashi match, the commentators made mention of Takagi’s injured neck post-Owens match. But Takahashi didn’t actually do much to target the neck. Sabre does not make the same mistake. Early on, Takagi frustratingly didn’t defend against attacks to the neck at all. Still, he was able to withstand Sabre’s unorthodox submissions. Sabre survives a Pumping Bomber and then counters the Last of the Dragon to a triangle choke. But Takagi immediately goes for the move again and Sabre counters to a rear naked choke. Takagi tries to shake it, but he can’t get out and loses consciousness at 19:24. This was more on the level of their G1 Climax match rather than their IWGP title match, which is to say it was still pretty goddamn great. There was no wasted motion so the pacing was great. Takagi’s lack of a defensive game plan was baffling, and I’m having a hard time squaring why it happened. That finish was incredible, though. Sabre went on to beat Takagi’s buddy Naito in the finals, but then lost to Okada in their title match in April. On that same show, Takagi and Naito wrestled Will Ospreay and Aaron Henare. It’s not worth writing about except to mention that Henare will become important to Takagi the following year. ****

April 16, 2022 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi, Tetsuya Naito, Hiromu Takahashi & BUSHI def. Togi Makabe, Tomoaki Honma, Atsuki Aoyagi & Yuma Aoyagi
From the Korakuen Hall 60th Anniversary Festival, an NJPW/AJPW cooperative show. Right after I bemoan not seeing Takagi and Takahashi team up, they team up. Makabe & Honma are teaming up with All Japan’s Aoyagis, making this an interpromotional match in the flimsiest of terms. Takahashi was the focal point from the LIJ side for much of the match, getting things moving against Atsuki. Takagi and Yuma were up next, doing a strength vs. strength thing. Honma GBH came in next and things got… not good. I can’t remember, did they always suck this much or are they just old? This match would have been a lot better had the young NEXTREAM guys been in the ring for their team the whole time. This didn’t exactly move slow, but nothing particularly eventful happened. Naito pinned Honma with the Destino at 17:25. **¾ 

In the next batch of matches, Takagi pivots to a different division, goes on a little vacation (testing the waters for a longer vacation later), and tries his hand at the G1 tournament again.