Here is what it’s all been building
to: The finals of the G1 Climax tournament, the first held in the “NJPW World
Era.” With some special attraction matches, frantic tag team matches building
up feuds to be worked out down the line, and a massive main event, it was truly
a show to be studied down the line for the many high points it hit. Here is how
it went down.
A strange masked man, at least to
most in attendance at Sumo Hall, stood in the center of the ring. This was
Delirious, representative of Ring of Honor. Speaking in rudimentary broken
English, a somewhat strange choice since his remarks would be translated (or
perhaps he always works a Neanderthal gimmick?), he extolled the talent of NJPW
and ROH talent. He then promised Ring of Honor would be making its way to Japan
in 2016.
Jushin ‘Thunder’ Liger, Sho Tanaka, and Ryohei Komatsu vs
Ryusuke Taguchi, Mascara Dorada, and David Finlay
At one point, Liger hit a Baseball
Slide to Finlay on the outside of the ring. Taguchi performed a caricature
of Nakamura's gestures when he makes his ring entrance, then hit his own take
on a bomaye on Komatsu, and pinned
for 3.
Taguchi, Dorada, and Finlay win.
Satoshi Kojima, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, and Captain New Japan vs Yuji
Nagata, Manabu Nakanishi, and Jay White
Kojima and Nakanishi started the
match. Kojima got Nakanishi in a headlock, then threw shoulder blocks that failed
to knock Nakanishi down. Tenzan and Kojima double teamed Nagata with Tenzan
firing off Mongolian Chops. CNJ wanted in the match, jumping up and down in the
corner, as Tenzan and Kojima hit stomps on Nakanishi. He received a Lariat by
Nakanishi.
Kojima lit up Nagata with Rapid Fire
Chops in the corner. Nagata put Tenzan n the
fujiwara Armbar as Nakanishi
held Kojima at bay in a Torture Rack; shades of their tag team feud from 15
years ago. Jay white hammered away at
Kojima and Tenzan, but then ran into their TenCoji Cutter double team maneuver.
Tenzan locked in an Anaconda Vice submission for the tap out victory.
Kojima, Tenzan, and Captain New Japan
win.
Michael Elgin vs YOSHI-HASHI
Elgin threw YOSHI-HASHI into a corner
but YOSHI-HASHI came flying back with a Lariat. YOSHI-HASHI hung Elgin over the
top rope and hit him with a Running Drop Kick.
Later, YOSHI-HASHI got hung up in the
ropes, and Elgin hit him with a Discus Forearm to the back. Elgin Deadlifted YOSHI-HASHI
into a German Suplex.
Elgin, from the second rope,
Deadlifted YOSHI-HASHI back into the ring and into a Falcon Arrow. He pinned
for 2. YOSHI-HASHI hit a left armed Lariat and pinned for two, almost 3. Elgin
cut off a Swanton Bomb but YOSHI-HASHI nailed a Sunset Flip Powerbomb from the top
rope. YOSHI-HASHI connected with the Swanton but Elgin kicked up from the pin.
Elgin hit a Bucklebomb and rolled YOSHI-HASHI up and into an Elgin Bomb. Elgin
pinned for 3.
Elgin wins.
This was a good match that gave Elgin the
triumphant send off he deserves after putting on an extremely impressive
performance throughout the G1. YOSHI-HASHI may seem like a strange choice for
an opponent, but it was an interesting dynamic having the power house Elgin
taking on a smaller and faster opponent with a very different style of attack
than most of those in the tournament.
Tomohiro Ishii, Toru Yano, and Kazushi Sakuraba vs ‘Bad Luck’ Fale,
Takashi Yujiro, and Tama Tonga
Ishii started out against Yujiro. Ishii
blasted Yujiro with forearms. Yano and Fale were tagged in. Yano went
immediately to the ropes and called for break. Fale ran in to choke Yano. He
battered Yano with lefts and rights in corner. Tonga skated around Yano on all
fours and drop kicked him in the back. Yano pulled away the turnbuckle pad causing
Yujiro to crash into the corner. Yano ducked a swing by Fale and hit him with the
turnbuckle. Tonga splashed Ishii but Ishii pulled Tonga into Fale's path as he
charged in next.
Sakuraba caught Tonga in a Sleeper hold
from the apron. He tossed a dazed Tonga toward Ishii who then hit a Brainbuster
on Tonga and pinned for 3.
Team CHAOS, Ishii, Yano, and Sakuraba
won.
This was an ok none-too-serious match that moved
quickly enough. With the abundance of wrestlers at this low-to-mid level, some
consideration may be in order of putting some pairs together for a focus on tag
team competition.
Hiroki Goto, Katsuyori Shibata, and Kota ibushi vs Tetsuya
Naito, Togi Makabe and Tomoaki Honma
Ibushi and Makabe started the match.
Ibushi tried a shoulder block but couldn’t budge Makabe. Ibushi took Makabe to
the mat with a drop kick. Shibata tagged in, and stared down Naito. Honma
tagged in for his team instead. Shibata and Honma tied up on the ropes. Both
give a clean break, but from the apron Naito hit a forearm to the back of Shibata's
head.
Goto tried for the ushikoroshi on Honma, Honma escaped,
the two hit each other with Lariats and Honma knocked Goto off his feet. Naito
tagged in, stepped on Goto and posed. He
turned his attention to the opposite corner. Meanwhile Goto back to his feet
and Naito walked into a huge Lariat by Goto. Goto tagged in Shibata. The
audience chanted LOUDLY for Shibata as he attacked Naito. Ibushi hit a Standing
Moonsault on Makabe. Makabe came back and leveled Ibushi with a Lariat.
Honma connected with the kokeshi on Ibushi. Shibata and Naito
brawled on the outside. Shibata knocked Naito over the guard rail and choked El
Ingobernable with his t-shirt. In the ring, Ibushi got a Jumping Powerbomb on
Honma, followed by the Phoenix Splash. Ibushi pinned Honma for 3. After the
match Makabe teed off on Ibushi with forearms. Ibushi fought back with a huge kick
that sent Makabe down. Shibata sat in the ring waiting for Naito who decided to
lie across the apron in lazily before heading to the back with a disgusted look
on his face.
Goto, Shibata, and Ibushi win.
This was a good quick and chaotic melee that generated
tension between a few pairs with conflicts during the tournament. It marks an
interesting departure from the CHAOS vs NJPW program that lasted most of the
first half of the year.
The camera pans to show veteran
Genichiro Tenryu, a rather imposing figure, come toward the commentary table. He
called out Gedo. They traded words inside the ring. Okada came ou, and among
other things, agreed to face off against one other in November.
**Intermission**
The Young Bucks vs reDRagon (IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag
Team Championship defense)
Fish and Matt started out butMatt
tagged Nick in right away. Nick slams Fish down but from the ground, Fish calls
up to him to 'suck it.' O’Reilly jumped off the apron toward the Bucks on the
floor but they caught him with a Double Super Kick. Cody Hall, who accompanied
them to the ring, then lifted O’Reilly and carried him all the way to the back
while the Bucks double teamed Fish. O’Reilly remained missing as Fish fought
off both Bucks. O’Reilly would eventually comes back, ducking a Lariat from Hall
to get back on the apron and tag into the match. Dragon hit the Backbreaker and
Knee Drop from the second rope combination for a two count on Matt.
O’Reilly got draped on the bottom
rope by Matt as Nick hit a 450 Degree Splash onto him. There was a pin for a 2
count. The Indietaker was interrupted by Fish yanking Nick onto the floor. O’Reilly
hit Rolling Double Underhook Hip Tosses on Nick, and this went into the
reDRagon Wheelbarrow Hold-Double Underhook DDT-Wheelbarrow suplex combination.
There was a pin for 2.
Nick pushed the referee into Fish, and
as Fish moved him aside, Nick kicked him in the crotch. The Bucks got the tag team
championship belts and hit Fish and O’Reilly with them, garnering boo’s and
real heat directed at the popular team.
Hall held Fish and O’Reilly as the
Bucks went for Super Kicks in stereo but Fish and O’Reilly escape and the Bucks
nailed Hall instead. The action continued back and forth. Finally, on the
outside of the ring, Fish and O’Reilly hit Chasing
The Dragon on Matt outside the ring and pinned for the victory.
reDRagon win and are the new IWGP
Junior Heavyweight Tag Team champions.
This was an excellent match between teams that have
faced each other often enough, the combination threatens to get stale. Not with
these four wrestlers. They keep innovating and pushing each other, including
new elements as they go such as incorporating Cody Hall into the match. The
Bucks’ antics made for a clear heel vs babyface dynamic and added drama to the
fight.
KUSHIDA vs Ricochet (IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship
defense)
The two tied up and KUSHIDA gave Ricochet
a clean break in the corner.
KUSHIDA came off the ropes and
shoulder blocked Ricochet to the mat but he jumped right back up. Both did a
wild series of handspring and summersault attacks and dodges until KUSHIDA hit
a Drop Kick from the top rope, not in the corner. Ricochet lifted KUSHIDA and
spun him around into a Powerbomb. Ricochet leapt up over the post to hit a Tope
Con Hilo onto KUSHIDA outside of the ring and some ways up the ramp.
Ricochet dove off the ropes but
KUSHIDA caught him and applied a Cross Armbar in midair. Ricochet was able to
lift KUSHIDA and slam him down to break the hold. Ricochet caught KUSHIDA in
midair and hit a Front Headlock Suplex, held and rolls through into another,
and then rolled through and hit a Suplex releasing KUSHIDA to the mat. This was
amazing.
Ricochet caught KUSHIDA with a
jumping double knee strike.
Ricochet did the Benadryller (a move
similar to the GTS where his opponent is flipped from a Fireman’s Carry into a
standing position and then kicked in the head). He pinned KUSHIDA but KUSHIDA
grabbed the ropes. Ricochet missed a 450 Splash off the top rope. KUSHIDA
locked in the Hoverboard Lock (fujiwara
Armbar). Ricochet tried to escape to the ropes but KUSHIDA rolled him to the center
of the ring. Ricochet tapped out.
KUSHIDA wins and retains the
championship.
This was a very good match featuring dazzling high
flying moves and a lot of reversals. It was somewhat lacking in dramatics but
this was not a long built up feud. It’s a good example of NJPW’s capacity to
fill out a card by maintaining strong relations to the best of the world’s
independent wrestlers.
Kazuchika Okada and the Kingdom (Michael Bennett and Matt Taven
with Maria) vs AJ Styles, Karl Anderson, and Doc Gallows
Okada started off against Anderson
but Anderson suddenly tagged in Styles. The two chain wrestle til both reached
a standing position. AJ extended his hand to Okada. Okada motions to take it
and then forms the too sweet sign and pushes it into Styles' forehead.
Taven Drop Kicked Gallows from the
turnbuckle. Gallows answers with a Bicycle Kick. Gallows
and Anderson hit a double team Reverse Neckbreaker on Taven. There was a pin
for 1. As Anderson poured on offense, Maria got on the apron and began
gyrating. Anderson, like a snake charmed by song, began slithering back and
forth and moving toward her. Styles ran into the ring, tried to snap Anderson
back into reality but Anderson got AJ to see his point of view and a hypnotized
AJ also began moving toward Maria. Gallows joined them and berated them for
their weak wills and threatens to take Maria out with a closed fist, causing
Maria to jump back down to the floor and proclaim she was done with the
seduction games.
Okada and the Kingdom hit big boots
to all three Bullet Club members knocking them out of the ring. Okada hits a
DDT on Styles and nipped up. He rolled through a bridge and hit the Neckbreaker
over the knee. Okada missed with the Top Rope elbow. Gallows threw Taven off the
turnbuckle into a Necknbreaker by Anderson.
AJ countered the Rainmaker into a
Styles Clash, but Okada kicked his way out of AJ’s finisher and hit the Tombstone.
He tried for the Rainmaker, but AJ dodged and after a number of counters,
rolled Okada into the Styles Clash and executed it for a pin and 3 count.
The Bulllet Club, Styles, Anderson,
and Gallows and are victorious.
This was an overall very good match, especially due
to the chemistry between Okada and Styles. The silliness involving Maria seems
very unnecessary and takes me out of the match but it was an early spot that
wasn’t crucial in the finish. Styles is making an art out of finding ways to
come out of different positions to put opponents in the Styles Clash. His pin
on Okada is to me significant of another confrontation between the two down the
line.
Before the main event, both Muto and
Chono came down to sit at the commentary booth. They have had a legendary feud
back and forth and numerous wins in the G1. Their confrontations are absolutely
worth tracking down and watching on NJPW World. In addition they both made
appearances in the US in the late 90s as NWO members in the heyday of WCW.
Their run here did not feature them getting to perform to the extent they are
capable of, but are worth a look, accessible on the WWE Network.
Hiroshi Tanahashi vs Shinsuke Nakamura (G1 Climax Finals)
The two locked up very carefully,
then backed away from one another. Tanahashi worked on Shinskue's arm and
Shinsuke pulled away guarding the previously injured limb.
Tanahashi shoulder blocked Nakamura down
to the mat and did some cocky air guitar posturing signaling Tanahashi would be
playing the role of the heel, at least early on in the match.
Tanahashi lead a focused attack on
Nakamura’s leg hitting a chop block and then stomping on the bomaye weapon. Nakamura did a
jumping kick to Tanahashi off the turnbuckle. Nakamura jumps and drives a knee into
Tanahashi's chest. Nakamura flicked dismissive kicks to the side of Tanahashi’s
head. Nakamura delivered knees to the chest of Tanahashi but Tanahashi came
back with a Sling Blade.
Nakamura delivered a double dose of
the electrified knee to Tanahashi in the corner, but Tanahashi pushed back and
hit a Dragon Screw Leg Whip. Tanahashi hit a High Fly Flow onto Nakamura on the
floor. Nakamura avoided a High Cross Body into the turnbuckle and drove knees
into Tanahashi's chest. He followed with the Back Cracker. Nakamura prepared to
hit a bomaye but Tanahashi cut it off
with a Dropkick to Nakamura’s knee. Tanahashi caught Nakamura’s Reverse Kick
and hit another Dragon Screw Leg Whip. Then Tanahashi put Nakamura in the Lion
Tamer. Nakamura rolled out of the way of a High fly Flow and hit a bomaye to the back of Tanahashi's head. Nakamura
connecteed with a bomaye front the
second rope. He went for a third but Tanahashi countered into a pinning bridge
for a two count. Nakamura hit another bomaye.
Tanahashi just managed to kick out before three.
Tanahashi hit a Sling Blade. He went
to the top for the High Fly Flow on a standing Nakamura. Tanahashi went up for
another High Fly Flow, connected but Nakamura miraculously kicked out. Tanahashi
slapped Nakamura, but Namakura answered with a right hand. Nakamura picked
Tanahashi up and hit a Landslide. Both men laid motionless on the mat. Nakamura
rose slowly to his feet. Tanahashi got up and the two exchanged forearms. Nakamura
seemed to be losing consciousness but he came to and drove knee after knees
into Tanahashi’s midsection. Nakamura tried to lock in the Cross Armbar but
Tanahashi kept his hands locked together. Nakamura shifted the hold into a
Triangle Choke. Tanahashi managed to step over Nakamura and break the hold but Nakamura
came back with a bomaye. Tanahashi
just managed to roll his shoulder up. Nakamura seated Tanahashi on the
turnbuckle. Nakamura climbed up, and tried to set up for a Top Rope Landslide. Tanahashi
fought his way out. Tanahashi let loose ai flurry of Forearms. Tanahashi then
hit a High Fly Flow as Nakamura was still standing unsteadily on the second
rope. Tanahashi hit a Full Nelson Suplex for a two count. Tanahashi hit the
High Fly Flow onto a standing Nakamura and went back for one more, connected,
and pinned for three.
Tanahashi wins the G1 climax.
Afterwards the two long time rivals shook hands and
Tanahashi celebrated with the trophy he was presented with.
This was an incredible event. For many, it was the first
G1 Climax to watch unfold because of its greater accessibility through NJPW
World. If this was meant as a first foot forward it was an amazing job that
could be able to rally wrestling fans to tune in to New Japan in the weeks and
months to come. The card slowly built to a match that absolutely stood as the
crowning achievement of the tournament; there is no doubt it was the best match
of the series. More reactions to come, but for now, I feel as though I witnessed
a true landmark in the realm of pro wrestling.
Twitter: @mondocurry
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