Shingo Takagi: Rampage Dragon

This time around we focus on more of Takagi’s extra-NJPW battles and then his performance in the 33rd G1 Climax Tournament.

June 9, 2023 – Tokyo, Japan 

Suwama, Yuji Nagata & Yuma Anzai def. Shingo Takagi, Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI
From NJPW/AJPW/NOAH All Together Again. This was fun, but felt vanishingly short. LIJ started by targeting the young Anzai, irritating Anzai’s partners enough for the New Japan crew to stay in control. But when Triple Crown Champ Nagata and AJPW all-star Suwama came back, things wrapped up pretty quickly. I was ready for a fun showdown between Suwama and Takagi, but it barely happened. And so I’m sad that the Champion Carnival is already over for the year, because a directionless Takagi might have had a fun detour in that tournament. Suwama hit BUSHI with the Last Ride for the win at 8:31. **½

June 25, 2023 – Toronto, Ontario

Shingo Takagi, Hiromu Takahashi & BUSHI def. Jeff Cobb, Kyle Fletcher & TJP
From Forbidden Door, Zero Hour. The disrespect of putting Takagi on a pre-show in unforgivable. This was a rather typical if well-performed pre-show match. Everyone hit everyone else quickly and none of it led to anything, but it hardly mattered because the point of the match was to warm up the crowd. This did that. The most interesting bit was Cobb stopping Takahashi’s momentum and tossing him around the ring, coupled with Takagi’s exasperated expression at seeing it. TJP almost caught Takagi off-guard with some slippery offense, but Takagi put an end to that and tauntingly beat TJP with MADE IN JAPAN at 7:30. Cute, but unimportant. Well, I shouldn’t say unimportant, because it quietly earned LIJ a shot at the ROH World Six Man Tag Team Championships. **¾

June 29, 2023 – Toronto, Ontario

Brian Cage, Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona def. Shingo Takagi, BUSHI & Hiromu Takahashi {ROH World Six Man Tag Team Championship Match}
From ROH on HonoClub 18. I just don’t understand the point of spending thousands of dollars on plane tickets for LIJ just to have them wrestle in two short matches on a weekend during which said matches were not really advertised. Why waste the dough? That said, this match is fun in that both trios showed off a bit of teamwork on the way to the finish. LIJ never felt like they had a chance, which is a shame. That is, except for when BUSHI took out Cage with black mist… but then never capitalized on that. The Gates of Agony hit BUSHI with a double spinebuster for the win at 7:46. **¾

July 2, 2023 – Kobe, Hyogo 

Shingo Takagi def. Kono Mama Ichikawa
From Dragon Gate Kobe Pro-Wrestling Festival. For the third time in his long and illustrious career, Ichikawa is undertaking a Bosou (my Japanese is non-existent, but I think this more or less means reckless) match series. These matches see him take on, and get obliterated by, the biggest names in Japanese wrestling. Past opponents have included Masashi Aoyagi (RIP), Keiji Muto (in his finals singles match win), Muto’s one-time tag team partner Arashi, Jun Akiyama, Yuji Nagata, Shinobu Kandori, Great Sasuke, Necro Butcher, Akebono, Kensuke Sasaki, Abdullah the Butcher, and Atsushi Onita, among many others. This was billed as a mystery opponent for Ichikawa. Takagi’s Dragon Gate music plays, but it’s Punch Tominaga who comes out in Takagi’s old singlet. But Takagi’s current theme plays and the real guy comes out to a big ovation. Ichikawa hates Takagi for allowing the Open the Owarai Gate Championship to be deactivated when Takagi lost it in a Survival Cage match years earlier. Takagi wins this match in 17 seconds with a lariat, but in a not totally uncommon occurrence, Ichikawa gets the match restarted by appealing to Takagi’s desire to give the fans more of a show. Takagi tries to use Tominagi as a weapon, but Ichikawa avoids it. Tominaga and Referee Yagi wind up getting intimately involved in the match. Don Fujii runs in and almost helps Ichikawa win by clotheslining Takagi into a German suplex, but Takagi survives. Takagi gets Ichikawa up for the Last of the Dragon, but Fujii is scared of what will happen to his buddy and throws in the towel at 5:55. If you don’t have a connection to the Dragon Gate characters I’ve mentioned, I doubt this will do much for you. But I felt all wrapped up in it like a blanket. Takagi beats up Tominaga after the match. ***

July 16, 2023 – Sapporo, Hokkaido

Eddie Kingston def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax 33. Kingston came into this fresh off of winning the NJPW STRONG Championship from KENTA. I felt two different ways about this match. On the one hand, the stand-and-fight without defense mode they chose gave us some interesting selling in the first half of the match. And it made the match go by quickly. But in the second half, it made me feel like both guys were dumb for just letting the other attack them without any attempts to stop it. Pride is one thing, but it’s a long tournament and you want to get off to a good start. Takagi looked like he was caught by surprise in the end as Kingston nailed him with three spinning backfists, and then in a daze he fell to the Northern Lights Bomb at 12:20. I have a feeling Takagi is going to be taking quite a few Ls this year. ***½

July 19, 2023 – Sendai, Miyagi

HENARE def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From G1 Climax 33. Don’t let the match graphic fool you, HENARE’s face is now covered in tā-moko, a Maori tattoo. Lose your first name, gain more cultural identity. Kevin Kelly beefs it on commentary, saying that HENARE is representing “indigent” people all over the world. Major yikes on that slip. HENARE’s neck got jacked up in his previous tournament match by Mikey Nichols, so Takagi takes advantage. Halfway through the match, Kelly corrects his “indigenous” mistake. This was more on the level of their New Japan Cup match than their King of Pro-Wrestling title match, which is to say it was very good but not a candidate for best of the year. That said, the finish was tremendous, as they started getting desperate with strikes as the time limit was approaching and exhausted each other with strikes. HENARE caught Takagi with a second Streets of Rage for the win at 19:38. After HENARE hit his finisher, the referee was goading and cheering him on to make the cover. I’ve never seen that happen before; is it common? I’m now concerned and fairly convinced that Takagi is going to have an overall losing singles record in New Japan by the end of the this tournament. He’s 7-5 after this match. ***¾

January 23, 2023 – Nagano, Nagano 

Shingo Takagi def. Tomohiro Ishii {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From NJPW G1 Climax 33. Despite these guys never turning in a bad match against each other, I have no desire to watch them wrestle anymore. We’ve seen all there is to see from this rivalry, and this match didn’t prove any different. Kelly can’t help but goof when talking about their previous matches, saying they’ve met three (now four) times in the G1, and twice in the New Japan Cup. One of those non-G1 matches was for the NEVER Openweight Championship, and not the NJC. Whatever, a small mistake, but a mistake. The crowd was pretty subdued for this match, probably because both guys were coming into the match 0-2 in the tournament. Why cheer for a loser when it’s clear neither of them has a shot of winning the block? After running through their typical good but not quite epic match, both guys showed signs of exhaustion to telegraph that they were working faster than usual due to the time limit. I like that. Takagi hit a very weak Takagi Driver ‘98, but collapsed. He hit the Last of the Dragon, but was too tired to cover. Then he hit the Pumping Bomber for the win at 18:10 to go 5-1 over Ishii in their series. I’m glad they found someone that Takagi was allowed to beat in this tournament, though it would have been interesting for this to go to a draw since it’s their first match to ever clock in at under 20 minutes. That said, I appreciate the effort both guys made to show how Takagi was able to win in less than their usual amount of time. I liked this a little more than I expected to. ***¾

July 26, 2023 – Tokyo, Japan

Shingo Takagi def. Mikey Nichols {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From NJPW G1 Climax 33. Korakuen loves Takagi. I don’t think I’ve seen a Nichols match since he was in NXT, and I wasn’t impressed with him there. He controlled the first half of this match and I wasn’t impressed with that either. He bleeds from I’m not sure what, probably a headbutt, and I get the sense that something has gone wrong because the match abruptly ends at 9:13 after both guys collide in the ring and Takagi falls on top. That was super weird. I don’t think we missed out on a great match anyway, but I’m going to need to know more about what happened here. Takagi is now trailing the block leaders by only two points, so my interest is maybe starting to come back. **

July 30, 2023 – Nagoya, Aichi

Shingo Takagi tld. Tama Tonga {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From NJPW G1 Climax 33. I had a fun time watching this, though I don’t understand the logic of this draw. Takagi rarely seemed to be having a hard time dominating Tonga, so I’m not sure what we’re meant to understand made it so difficult for him to win. I really dug Tonga picking up the pace when the 15-minute mark was announced. The time limit expired at 20:00 as the match was continue to progress nicely. After this day, Nichols, HENARE, and Ishii were all eliminated with only two points. I don’t know why it bugs me so much that HENARE’s one win came at Takagi’s expence, except that it sort of telegraphs that Takagi is quite close to being eliminated. He’d be tied with Tonga and Kingston for second place had he won, but instead he’s in 4th, with Kingston in third, Tonga in second, and Finlay and EVIL tied for first. Takagi’s two remaining matches are against the block leaders, and I’d be just tickled if he could win at least one of them. ***¼

August 2, 2023 – Hiroshima, Hiroshima

Shingo Takagi def. Dave Finlay {Round Robin Tournament Match}
From NJPW G1 Climax 33. Takagi must win to stay alive in the tournament. Finlay claimed during his entrance that if he beat Takagi here, he’d win the block. That wasn’t at all a given, as the next and final day of action could see him lose to Kingston, which would have tied them up in points but had Kingston advance out of the block instead because of that victory. I quite liked the match between these two at last year’s G1. I liked this match a lot as well. Takaig got powerbombed into a table on the floor early on, and spent the rest of the match fighting from behind, not to win, but to keep from losing. He got very few pin attempts, usually having to roll away and catch his breath after hitting an offensive move. Finlay got plenty of pin attempts, but lost the match when he decided to stop going for them and rather string a few moves together. Takagi was able to block, hit the sliding elbow, and then put Finlay away with a lariat and the Last of the Dragon at 18:45. ****

Do I need to shut my stupid mouth? Are they making Takagi competitive? The standings after this event have him tied for second place with Tonga. And on commentary, Kelly said he was still alive (two people advance from each block this year), knowing how the rest of the night’s matches played out. I’m about to be that New Japan dork who tries to math out a path for him with one day left in the tournament. The best case scenario sees Takagi beat EVIL, HENARE beat Tonga, and Finlay and Kingston go to a draw. If that happens, then Takagi, Finlay, and Kingston tie for first place in the block with 9 points. I think given that result, Kingston and Takagi move on from the block, as Kingston would have one win and one draw against the other two, Takagi would have one win and one loss, and Finlay’ would have one draw and one loss. Damn. That’s a very narrow path. At least they have me curious for now the final day of block action will turn out, even if I’m not sure that Kelly’s pronouncement about Takagi’s viability is accurate. If nothing else, he’s now 1-1 against Finlay and presumably earned a shot at the NEVER Openweight Championship. 

August 8, 2023 – Yokohama, Kanagawa

EVIL def. Shingo Takagi {Round Robin Tournament Match} 
From NJPW G1 Climax 33. EVIL attacked before the bell, a sign of things to come. The first focus of the match was EVIL repeatedly trying to, and eventually succeeding in, ramming Takagi into the timekeeper. The first half of this match consisted almost entirely of EVIL sending Takagi to the floor so that other members of House of Torture could screw with him. Takagi eventually turned this into a real match and hit MADE IN JAPAN. That lasted all of two minutes before the shenanigans went off the rails. Takagi hit the Last Falconry, and Dick Togo ran into count the pin while the real referee was pulled to the floor. HoT even rang the bell to distract Takagi. The group attacked and choked out Takagi, but LIJ eventually ran out to even the score. They had me thinking Takagi might win after that, or more likely that the match time was running out and EVIL would stall out for a draw. But then EVIL just hit a low blow and the EVIL for the win at 17:40. This was pretty bad, save for that last bit of drama. And how lame to have a finisher that’s just your name. **

I was originally going to end this post at the end of Takagi’s G1 run, but I found it quite disappointing and don’t want to end it on a sour note. Also, I have no idea where Takagi goes from here, or when after this he’ll have had enough notable matches to do another post. So I waited a few weeks so I could add his big RevPro match.

August 26, 2023 – Hackney, London

Will Ospreay def. Shingo Takagi
From RevPro 11 Year Anniversary. It’s nice to know that even the touring version of this match is excellent. There are some things here that hold it back from being as good as its Japanese counterparts. One is that this crowd was more interested in singing the usual Ospreay chants than they were in reacting to what was actually happening in the ring. Down the stretch, they got more in tune with the action, but Takagi and Ospreay and to pull out all of the stops to get them there. That’s obnoxious, and while I hate that it reflects on my enjoyment of the match, them’s the breaks. There were also a couple of awkward moments that came as a result of these guys getting too cute with attempts at midair counters. That’s also a shame because the whole match was based in these two knowing each other so well and I got a lot of enjoyment out of that by and large. But when they screwed up it did take me out of it. Ospreay wound up dominating a lot of the match, which shouldn’t have been surprising but was. Both guys kicked out of each other’s major finishers, so Ospreay hit the Hidden Blade and Stormbreaker a second time for the win at 20:08. I think Chris Jericho ran out and attacked Ospreay after the match, but I can’t be fucked to keep watching because this has nothing to do with Takagi and Jericho for sure won’t show up in RevPro again. ****

I truly have no idea what’s ahead for Takagi now. I have a feeling he’s going to be in the kind of limbo that his buddy Tetsuya Naito had been for quite some time (until he won the G1 Tournament). First up appears to be a feud with Great-O-Khan, which at the very least means he isn’t being shuffled off into complete obscurity.