Shingo Takagi: Deposed Dragon

It’s a new year and Takagi is still the KOPW Champion, both provisional and official. But the first thing on his agenda is an attempt at NJPW’s big belt.

February 11, 2023 – Osaka, Osaka 

Kazuchika Okada def. Shingo Takagi {IWGP World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NJPW The New Beginning in Osaka. Takagi is wearing his KOPW title belt to a non KOPW title match. Good, he didn’t do that at the Wrestle Kingdom in Yokohama match against Katsuhiko Nakajima. These two were tied 2-2 going into this match, though the commentators (Chris Charlton’s feed sounds awful, like his vocal chain got messed up in the recording process somehow) suggested that Takagi’s wins came at times when Okada wasn’t on top of his game. On the other hand, they say that the Osaka crowd will favor Takagi. Okada largely dominated the beginning of the match, leaving Takagi alternating between expressions of shock and frustration. After the first Money Clip attempt, Takagi was able to string offense together for the first time to the crowd’s delight. He stayed in control for quite some time, but Okada was able to stop him with a Tombstone Piledriver on the floor. That allowed him to get the Money Clip on for much longer. He’d beaten Takagi with this move once before, you see, even though doing so takes a long time. A couple attempts at the Rainmaker led to Okada eating a lariat. I like that the first attempt at each of Okada’s finishers led to Takagi retaking control. And now Takagi strings a couple of his finishers together for a near-fall. Okada’s neck seems to be jacked up now, as the Rainmaker has no juice and Takagi is able to hit the Takagi Driver ‘98. But Okada avoids the Last of the Dragon and hits the Rainmaker to get some distance. Hey, this match rules. Takagi counters the Rainmaker to the Last of the Dragon, but can’t cover immediately and only gets a two-count. Both guys start breaking out desperation moves, things they reserve only for the ends of matches like this, which leads to Okada hitting the Emerald Flowsion (which he’d been looking for for about the last 10 minutes) and the Rainmaker for the win at 32:07. I think this might be my favorite of their five matches, though this and two others aren’t miles apart from one another. These guys have such great chemistry, and their matches have to date all had a unique story and flair to them. ****¼

February 19, 2023 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Yuma Anzai
From AJPW Excite Series. I absolutely loved this, mostly because it was exactly what it should have been given where Anzai is in his career. It’s clear to anyone who is paying attention that AJPW is hoping that Anzai can be groomed to be their next breakout star. This match was the final singles trial for Anzai before going into the Champion Carnival. Takagi took on the role of Stan Hansen/Terry Gordy/Steve Williams to Anzai’s rookie Kenta Kobashi here, and the results were just as good. Takagi was there to play ball, encouraging Anzai to come at him as hard as he could, showing a bit of respect at the effort, and then obliterating the youngun’. I was wondering if Takagi would bother hitting one of his big finishers to put Anzai away, and the answer was no; Takagi put on a nasty half crab for the win at 10:31. Anzai wound up doing okay in the tournament and then strung together a few singles wins to get a Triple Crown Championship match against Yuji Nagata, but sadly got injured in that match. We’ll see if he can get any of his momentum back when he returns, I assume next year. ***¼

March 10, 2023 – Kofu, Yamanashi 

Aaron Henare def. Shingo Takagi {Opening Round Match}
From NJPW New Japan Cup. This was a hell of a brawl. Henare had his snug gloves on, making gnarly contact with Takagi on most of his strikes. Takagi was game to return fire, but it was interesting to see him have so much trouble sustain control against this first-time one-on-one opponent. Henare kicking out so forcefully from MADE IN JAPAN was quite the moment, especially as Takagi never got a chance to even attempt the Last of the Dragon in a significant way. Takagi did what he could to avoid Henare’s Rampage spear, blocking it once and barely kicking out after it shortly thereafter. Henare was able to connect with the Streets of Rage for what I figured was an upset win at 20:46, but the commentators had been treating Henare like a reasonable threat the entire time. ***¾

April 2, 2023 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shingo Takagi def. Aaron Henare {NJPW King of Pro-Wrestling Championship Ultimate Triad Match}
From NJPW Road to Sakura Genesis. Takagi allowed Henare to choose the stipulation, which gave us this match in which the winner has to score a pinfall, a submission, and a ten-count knock out over his opponent in any order. No disqualifications and no count outs too. These guys go at each other pretty hard right out of the gate with hard strikes and rough fighting on the floor. It looks like Takagi might be the first to get the advantage by targeting Henare’s arms, but Henare fights through that pain and blocks Takagi’s bigger moves. About 15 minutes in, Takagi becomes the first to lose control when he becomes winded and stumbles into Henare’s powerbomb. It takes quite a while for Takagi to stop Henare’s momentum, which he does with his sneaky DDT. Henare comes back with a roundhouse kick before hitting the Rampage. He puts on the Twister and then moves into the Ultima to make Takagi submit. It seems like Takagi might be screwed, but he counters the Rampage to another DDT and then puts on the Anaconda Vice to make Henare submit. Henare comes back with wild offense, but Takagi catches him with a backslide to get a three-count. Henare hits the Streets of Rage right away to return the favor. So all that’s left is the KO for either guy. They get into a fist fight; Henare wins, only not well enough to keep Takagi down. Takagi blocks the Ultima and hits the Last of the Dragon. Henare can’t get his arms up, but that doesn’t stop him from hitting the liver punch and a couple of kicks. They trade headbutts until Takagi takes Henare down with him by hitting the Pumping Bomber. Both guys get up, but Henare collapses before making it all the way and Takagi wins at 38:15. This maintained an awesome gritty fight vibe throughout its entire length. The fact that Takagi spent the first ten minutes knotting up Henare’s arms caused Henare to be unable to raise them in the end lifted me out of my chair. At first I was thinking that this was a rare long match that I actually wished had been five or ten minutes longer, just so that the space between the pinfalls could have been longer. But thinking back, Henare was dominating at that point, so Takagi’s pinfall was a fluke and Henare should have been able to easily respond in kind. A beastly match, and probably one of Takagi’s best. ****¾

April 14, 2023 – Adelaide, South Australia 

Shingo Takagi def. PunchDrunk Istria
From NJPW TAMASHII V. This and the following two matches are from NJPW’s series of shows in Australia, meant to be the Oceanian version of STRONG and to help develop wrestlers from NJPW’s New Zealand dojo. There’s no commentary, so trying to figure out who Istria is requires more effort than I’m willing to put in. The crowd likes him a lot, so I guess he’s popular in Adelaide. It looks like he’s had a couple brief runs in Japan with NOAH and ZERO-1 before, but he’s mostly worked in Australia. The match is fine, though it has a strong house show vibe to it. Not in that the production is bad, because it’s sparse but presentable. More because you can feel the performance of it all, rather than feeling like both guys are trying to hurt each other. That’s rather rare in a Takagi match, but he might be tired from the travel. Weirdly, the time difference between Tokyo and Adelaide is only 30 minutes, as this city is one of those weird half-time zones like Mumbai. Anyway, the crowd ate it up so I can’t really hate on it. It just was quite the cooldown after watching that Henare match. The last couple of minutes saw Istria get in the zone, which was fun and bumped this up from average to pretty good. Takagi has enough and hits a bunch of forearms and elbows before putting Istria out with the MANRIKI at 14:57. ***

April 15, 2023 – Sydney, New South Wales 

Shingo Takagi def. Jack Bonza
From NJPW TAMASHII VI. I cannot say that I was excited for this rematch. Bonza’s Aussie faction of the Bullet Club is called the Rogue Army. These guys very quickly fight to the ramp for a callback to the crappy ending of their first match, and this time the Bad Luck Fale distraction leads to Bonza hitting a low blow. Why was that not a disqualification? I don’t want this to end in a disqualification five minutes in, but I would like an explanation as to why the rules are ignored. Bonza continues to not be interesting, wrestling the kind of match that most NJPW fans complain about when other Bullet Club members do it. That is to say, it’s all cheating and stalling, but not in a particularly fun way. The crowd loves Takagi, which keeps me from falling asleep at least. Things turn around a bit when Bonza baits Takagi into chopping him so that he can grab and attack the arm. He uses the weak arm to attack the leg, and then uses the weak leg to get at the neck. Where was this Bonza last time? How long can this last? It doesn’t really need to last long, as Takagi starts to fight back and then wins the match with the Last of the Dragon at 18:30. Right before the finish, Fale grabbed Takagi by the neck in front of the referee. No disqualification. Why bury the ref like that? Meh. One brief run of Bonza working like he gave a damn lifted this up to be about as good as their first match, which isn’t saying a ton. **¾

April 16, 2023 – Melbourne, Victoria

Shingo Takagi def. Robbie Eagles
From NJPW TAMASHII VII. We’re back to having no commentary. NJ should consider getting their acts together. It took them two months to get these shows on their streaming service after they happened, and for there to only be commentary on one of those shows after all that time is pretty lame. Takagi dominated far too much of this for it to be compelling outside of the crowd chants, which by this point were becoming sing-songy and less engaging. Eagles made a fun comeback in the second half where he targeted Takagi’s leg, first by hitting it with a 450 splash. But Takagi came back rather forcefully and won with a lariat at 22:24. This could have been five (or even more) minutes shorter. ***

April 29, 2023 – Kagoshima, Kagoshima 

Taichi def. Shingo Takagi {NJPW King of Pro-Wrestling Championship Takagi-Style Triad Match}
From NJPW Wrestling Satsuma no Kuni. There was no poll for this match, as Taichi acknowledged his abysmal record against Takagi in past matches and said that champion could pick the stipulation. This version of the Triad match is also three falls, but the wins can happen in any three of the following five ways: pinfall, submission, stoppage, countout, and 10-count KO. Stoppage isn’t particularly clear, and Kevin Kelly on commentary points out that how the referee decides a TKO is unknown. This started more slowly than their insane JTO match. Ten minutes in, Takagi narrowly avoided a countout and got a Ground Cobra Twist to score the first pin. Taichi also avoids a count out and then gets a Gedo Clutch to even the score. A short time later, he gets a KO point with the Black Mephisto. After some hard fighting that brought both men to exhaustion, Takagi hit the Takagi Driver ‘98, the Pumping Bomber, and the Last of the Dragon to get his KO point. He hit the STAY DREAM and then locked in a rear naked choke. That doesn’t work, and shortly after Takagi deliberately misses an opportunity to win by count out. Both guys are wrecked, but this pace isn’t getting the crowd excited. Taichi knocks Takagi silly with a kick and then locks in the Stretch Plum. Hiroumu Takahashi refuses to throw in the towel, but the ref takes Takagi’s pulse and calls for the TKO stoppage at 43:40. I like that the match naturally changed as the path to win narrowed, and I like how believable Taichi winning in the end was because it mostly felt like he was in the lead the whole time. But I don’t like that it was pretty slow the whole way through. And now I’m over here reminding myself that this is the provisional title until December, and Takagi could still win it back. But I’m also over here realizing that we won’t be getting sick Takagi KOPW matches all year now, which is more important. Maybe they were getting too bloated anyway. ***½

When we come back, I finally get caught up to present day as Takagi travels to other companies to try to get some mojo back before entering the G1 Climax Tournament.