Showing posts with label Luther. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luther. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Onita Pro 09/29/1999

   (Written by jom)

    If you look about an inch up, you'll notice an actually good photo for once! I've been trying to find pictures from these Onita Pro shows for a while now, and I've finally found one. Of course, this isn't actually a photo from the show I'm talking about. It's from an untaped show ten days before, because Shu Pro's magazine archive doesn't have the magazine covering this post's shows. Also, I already know I won't be finding any more Onita Pro pictures for the rest of 1999. Damn you BBM and your incomplete archive. Onto the review!

    Actually, not onto the review just yet, because this show starts with the FUNERAL OF GREAT NITA. This show is only a month after the Nita/Muta deathmatch, so I guess Nita is actually dead after that match? A little slideshow plays of Nita being a freak and facing guys like Mr. Pogo, before cutting to the ring which has Great Nita's coffin in it, a single spotlight shining down onto the jet black tomb. The people are silent for a 10 bell salute, break out into Great Nita chants afterwards, and then the segment ends. No emerging from the casket, no jokes or interruptions or anything. Nita is DEAD in pro wrestling canon. What a way to start a broadcast.

Chain: Rey Pandita vs. Animal Welfare Association Satan

    For one final time, I beg to be enlightened: who the fuck is Rey Pandita? You can probably guess from the way I wrote that, but this is the last ever appearance of Rey Pandita in Onita Pro. I couldn't even try to tell you why that is. All I know is that his name doesn't appear on a single card after this. Maybe he was dragged to hell considering his final match is a chain deathmatch against SATAN! This is the same dude from the last show who turned on Pandita and joined up with the Hayabusa clones. Is Onita trying to make some sort of political statement here? He's created a character equating an animal welfare association to the devil, and has made him explicitly heel. Does Onita have heat with PETA? Did they try to make him Get The F Out? I have a feeling even Onita wouldn't be able to answer these questions.

    Yeah, this match was fucking bizarre. It's three minutes long and still joined in progress. Pandita and Satan botch half of the moves they go for. The other half aren't interesting. Both guys keep tripping over the chains and there are multiple points where they almost injure themselves. It's a complete mess.

    There's actually one spot that's really cool, one that I've thought of before that could be a great tide-shifter for an actually serious chain match. Pandita goes for a dive without realizing the chains are wrapped up in the ropes, and on landing, his arm nearly gets ripped off. It's an incredibly gross and dangerous spot to pull out in a sloppy worthless comedy match like this, but god bless Mitsunobu Kikuzawa (I am CERTAIN that it's him now) for committing. Of course, When Satan goes for a dive right after, Pandita immediately gets up and throws him off the top. The cool wrist-breaking spot doesn't actually matter. Nothing matters in this match.

    Pandita wins after pantsing Satan and immediately school-boy'ing him. He then tries to steal Satan's shoes or something, I don't know.

    God speed you, Rey Pandita. 

Match Rating: Rey Pandita

Yusaku & Daisaku vs. Takashi Sasaki & Fushitori Karasu

    Here's the show's obligatory DDT offer match, this time including the fresh-faced Karasu! He debuted on the last show in a god-awful tag featuring the two guys in this show's opener and another Hayabusa clone who will never appear again. He's teaming with Sasaki, a man who redeemed himself with an amazing tag last time, and they're taking on the Shimoda brothers. We haven't seen either of them since the first Onita Pro show, where both were mentally tortured by Rey Pandita. Hopefully they can do a better job this time around.

    And they do! Kinda. Maybe? I don't know, this was really just a match. The Shimoda bros are cool here though. Yusaku is a big mean bully, and Daisaku... never actually gets to do anything. I think he does an arm-wringer to Karasu once and that's all we see. But still, Yusaku is here! I like Yusaku! Let's go Yusaku! He's definitely not as good as he'll get in the future (and he does a stupid DDT no-sell spot with Sasaki), but as a guy with less than two years of wrestling under his belt, he's awesome. The highlight of the whole match is him killing Karasu with a lariat.

    Speaking of Karasu, let's talk about that bird freak. He's not very good. A lot of his basics are nonexistent, and he botches about as much as the two guys in the opener did. At the same time, I'm starting to see the vision with Karasu. Sure, he botches a lot, but man, he's great at dying. He hits an insane plancha on Yusaku which nearly sends him into the bleachers ribs-first. He goes for a diving splash and almost dies from spiking himself on his head. He also sells like a ragdoll, with lots of stumbling and crumbling, and he loves to go entirely still on the mat like he's been paralyzed. Watching Karasu is like watching one of those videos where a guy is walking on a rickety bridge across a canyon. You know that he probably won't actually die, but with every little gust of wind, every snappy swing of the rope bridge, you can't help but believe that you're about to see a death. Karasu puts a great deal of fear into me because one day he's gonna bump and not stand back up. And, in a way, that's more compelling than most other wrestling.

    Takashi Sasaki is also here. He does some kicks or whatever. Yusaku wins with a Yusaku Clutch (the Batista Bite). I know I just talked a bunch about Karasu's strangely engrossing work, but this was still a generally nothing match. It wasn't bad, but I wouldn't try to recommend it to anyone.

Match Rating: C+

Miss Mongol & RIE vs. Misae Genki & Yoshiko Tamura

    Onita Pro cards are incredibly predictable. Following the DDT offer match, we are given the obligatory joshi match. This has roughly been the format for the last three shows, and it will probably be the format for the next ten. I don't have any complaints, but I do think it's funny that Onita had a very clear template for all of his shows. This is the first show since the start of the series to not feature an FMW joshi reunion tag, and instead just a straight up normal wrestling tag. I say good to this, because the joshi reunion tags became stale fast. Mongol and RIE are both good. Genki and Tamura are also both good. I have a feeling this match will be good. 

    The results are in: it's good! Well, good enough at least. A fine little match here. RIE is by far the best part of the match, entirely because she fills the roles of victim and fighter very good. She does a good job of selling for Tamura and feeding for all of her spots, and works nicely with Mongol during their tandem attacks. However, on offense, RIE also delivers the goods, hitting a pretty nasty diving knee to the back of Genki's head, and generally moving at a great speed for all of her attacks. She's the lifeblood of the match, since everyone else is just intent on coming in and hitting moves without much care.

    Genki is the best of the other three, simply because she's big and hit big wrestler moves like chokeslams and really loose backdrops. Tamura also hits cool moves like the cutter. Mongol is mostly non-existent but does hit a nice STO. I feel weird just listing moves here but I don't know what else to say. These three mostly exist to hit moves. Tamura sells alright and Mongol sells well in the finishing stretch, but really, there's not much else going on.

    Genki wins the match for her team with the G-Driver. Again, this was fine. I feel like the way I wrote about it might make you think it's not good. It is! It's just incredibly surface-level and unambitious. It filled its spot on the card well enough, but it also never tried to excel in that position. It was a match that happened, and, in a way, that's a fate worse than being outright bad or bizarre. I will remember Pandita vs. Satan a year from now. I'm already having trouble remembering this match while finishing the write-up.

Match Rating: C+

Shigeo Kato & Shooter #2 vs. Exciting Yoshida & Sanshiro Takagi

    Kato! Wow, I had no idea he would ever show up in Onita Pro. Kato is probably the biggest victim of WYF losing a semi-regular timeslot on Battle Station, because he's generally just a solid enough worker up until 1998. Around the start of 1999 though, Kato becomes this annoying little chickenshit heel, beginning his slow transformation into the Japanese indie Ric Flair. This is late 1999, so I have some expectations that he's already gonna be tapping into that role. He's with Shooter #2. I have no idea who this is. He's wearing the usual Shooter gear, except with a black Thrasher shirt on. I guess he likes skateboarding on his spare time or something, I don't know. Takagi and Yoshida really need no introduction; I've talked about each of them at least 3 times now.

    Within 10 seconds, I realize that the referee is Yasuki Shino, the representative of NEO and one of the main heel figures in DDT around the time. I realize this because he does the fastest pinfall count I've ever seen that Takagi just barely kicks out of. I am now a happy man, because this is complete bullshit and I love complete bullshit. There's lots of awesome little moments with referee Shino being the most biased man alive, like when Shooter has Takagi in a weird camel clutch thing and Shino steps on Takagi's fingers as casually as possible. Shino is also carrying around a taser for the entire match, and any time Yoshida starts getting feisty on the apron, he walks over and starts waving the activated taser at Yoshida. It's all so stupid and such an egregious example of a referee being a biased piece of shit. I love it so much. Very rarely do I get to see Tirantes-ism in Japanese wrestling.

    In terms of the actual wrestling, there's not much to talk about. Kato does some nice work, hitting a beautiful dropkick along with some deeply American moves like the Mr. Perfect neck snap. Yoshida's appearance halfway into the match has him spamming headbutts which is pretty awesome. Shooter #2 sucks, but he's also not in much. Takagi is probably the best worker overall, and gets to show his stuff with a really nice dropkick of his own. The highlight of the match, though, comes right near the end. Shino goes for a taser shot on Takagi, but Takagi dodges, making Shino accidentally tase Shooter. Takagi then goes for a stunner, and Shino botches it in such spectacular fashion that it really needs to be seen to be believed. 

    Takagi wins right after this with the Sanshiro Stunner 2000. I thought this was a pretty fun bullshit match. The match started to lose steam near the end (the complete silence from the crowd seemed to confirm we share that sentiment), but the finishing stretch was awesome in a car crash sort of way. Hopefully Shino reappears later on in the series and causes more trouble.

Match Rating: B-

Atsushi Onita, Katsuji Ueda, & Masashi Aoyagi vs. Nise Onita, Sambo Asako, & The Shooter #1

    On the last Onita Pro show, Nise Onita was sacrificed to the gods by way of an Ueda mauling. Now, he is back again, teaming with regular mauling victim Sambo Asako and the unknown Shooter #1 to face his two biggest victimizers, along with his hero. It's gotta be awful to see your idol teaming up with your biggest enemies, especially when they all have the goal to kick your ass. How will Nise fare in this mental warfare?

    Considering the first thing he does is the Onita jacket throw at a dumbfounded Onita, it seems he may be more mentally resilient than I'd given him credit for. He's certainly not any more physically resilient, because he dies here once again.

    I'll be entirely frank: this is a mostly unnoteworthy match outside of the Onitas. Shooter exists to stop people from losing and then get thrown outside. Ueda and Aoyagi chain together combos and just beat people up. Asako gets about half a minute to shine against Onita, but he exclusively sells and is gone from the rest of the match after this. The Onitas are the stars though.

    This is probably Nise Onita's best performance yet. I've talked before about his talent in emulation, but he's on an entirely different level here. He's selling like Onita would, but he's doing it to 150%. Every single strike thrown his way has him shaking and swaying like a stray dog in December. He writhes around in pain to the extent you'd almost think he's making a joke out of pain itself. He's beyond a tribute act of Onita here, getting extremely close to being a flat-out parody. And yet, there's so much genuine feeling behind all of it. That's probably why I find it possible to believe in it, to find real value in it. Nise may be working as an exaggerated Onita here, but he's still Toshiyuki Moriya, the world's greatest Onita fan, and beyond the hyperbole of the physical motions, there's a feeling of personal reality. Moriya bleeds and cries and screams because he's human, and that humanity is interlaced with his every movement. The passion behind everything he does is palpable, and it takes a performance that could be considered laughable and turns it into something commendable.

    On the entire opposite side of the spectrum, Atsushi Onita is a monster in this match. Just because of his position as the perennial underdog of wrestling, we really don't have many Onita performances you could refer to as monstrous, but I feel like this is one of them. He doesn't bump, he doesn't sell, he doesn't take any sort of meaningful offense. Hell, he outright ignores shots from Asako and Nise at different points. He's fully in the zone beating those two within an inch of their lives. When Asako demands him to get in the ring, Onita responds by repeatedly headbutting him around the ring until Asako can no longer stand. Matched up against Nise, Onita immediately throws the doppelgänger to the floor and piledrives him to hell. The most telling moment in this match is soon after, when Onita punches Nise in the head over and over while Nise is on the apron, leading Nise to collapse back to the floor. Onita has always portrayed himself in the ring as a man who lacks the abilities of his peers but makes up for it with a mountainous amount of spirit. It's important to pay attention to the phrase "peers" though. Onita is weaker in ability compared to guys like Tenryu and Choshu, but so is everyone else in the world. Onita is still one of the strongest wrestlers on the planet, and this felt like a declaration from him of the pecking order in Onita Pro.

    The match ends with Onita hitting a powerbomb on Nise, followed by a strike combo from Ueda, before Aoyagi finishes him off with a spinning heel kick. A fitting end to an impassioned performance from Nise. As a whole, this isn't really worth going out of your way to see. A lot of the action wasn't particularly enthralling, and 2/3rds of this match didn't inspire anything in me (even if I usually love Asako and Aoyagi). Still, the Onitas carry this into being a match I'd still call good, and if you think their performances sound at all interesting to you, I think you might enjoy checking the match out.

Match Rating: B-

Falls Count Anywhere Street Fight Death: Atsushi Onita, Mitsunobu Kikuzawa, Nobutaka Araya, Sambo Asako & Shigeo Okumura vs. Dr. Hannibal, Dr. Luther, Ichiro Yaguchi, Mr. Pogo & Shoji Nakamaki

    After four months of battles and bloodshed, the Tenryu threat has been eliminated. Now, Onita must move towards the future by going to war with a face from his past. Mr. Pogo leads the new charge of enemies into Onita Pro (all four other guys on his team have already fought in Onita Pro) to try and defeat his greatest rival. This is the biggest match in Onita Pro yet, with ten people in total facing off. Also, this is the first Onita brawl to have no object-based stipulation. There's no barbed wire ropes, no explosives, nothing. It's just a classic falls count anywhere brawl.

    This is probably the main reason why this match is my least favorite Onita Pro main so far. There's absolutely more to it than that, and this is still really fun, but comparing this match to everything else feels almost unfair. I feel like this match almost has a "too many cooks" kind of problem. There's so many guys trying to do different things that it goes beyond chaotic into feeling scattered and way less thought out. The loss of such a demanding figure like Tenryu also makes the heel group feel a lot less focused. Pogo is a good addition to the match, but he isn't trying to lead the charge or anything like that. All Pogo really does is concentrate on Onita, and for that matter, he mostly gets his ass kicked. Really, the only person I want to note from Pogo's team is Nakamaki, who sells like a motherfucker as usual. I feel like I haven't given him his flowers for his work in these matches, but really, he's a vital part of the formula, and he deserves his credit as a guy that bumps and sells big while also throwing a bunch of awesome headbutts.

    The face team, sadly, is just as unnoteworthy. Okumura and Araya hit a cool superbomb/back suplex combination at one point, and that's really the only notably good thing either of them did. Kikuzawa and Asako barely ever show up on screen. This brawl is entirely focused on Onita, which I'm not really against since he puts in a great performance. He comes out with Great Nita half-paint and immediately mists Pogo upon the latter entering the ring. Onita spends this match being incredibly cool and incredibly funny at the same time. In-between the sick reckless brawling around Korakuen, Onita mists every single member of the other team except for Dr. Luther. He even mists Dr. Hannibal through Hannibal's chalk throw. He also does the Great Nita prancing around the ring and keeps headbutting people as he does it. Is this better than his performance in the last match? It's hard to say, since these two performances are so different in purpose and execution. What I can say though is that he didn't mist the entirety of the last match's team, so he gets some points for that here. 

    Eventually, Luther hits Kikuzawa with a liger bomb on a chair, and wins. This is the first time Onita has lost a main event in our series (he lost one earlier in the month on an untaped show), and it's because of LUTHER. Truly incredible stuff.

    I have very little to say overall. Even with my problems with the match, this was still a good amount of fun, and featured a memorable Onita performance. Is it the only thing memorable about this match though? Sadly, I'd say so. For the first time in blog history, an Onita Pro show is going without a single A-rated match.

Match Rating: B

    The decline in quality in Onita Pro main events is starting to worry me a little. I was fine with the second show's main being worse than the first, because that first main was one of the best matches I've ever seen. I was also okay with the third being worse than the second, since I felt that it was more representative of my personal preference for straight-up brawling rather than the dramatic explosion matches. I even understand why this was worse than the third (too many wrestlers to try and pay attention to, the loss of Tenryu). However, I'm beginning to worry this might be a trend, and I may have made a poor choice in committing myself to watch every Onita Pro show ever. I guess only time will tell.

Show Rating: C+

Sunday, March 3, 2024

Onita Pro 05/13/1999

                 (Written by jom)

    Ahhhh, Onita Pro.

    It's not much of a secret, but I'm a total sucker for skeezy Japanese indie wrestling. It's the scene that I dove into when I saw the branching paths of being a wrestling fan before me, and I've maintained a long-term loving-yet-unhealthy relationship with it for at least five years now. While I've thankfully expanded my range of wrestling consumption beyond the shindies of Kansai into scenes like the shindies of Tijuana, I'll probably always keep myself locked into this world of bizarre masked gimmicks based on inside jokes only the workers get and sociopaths no-showing events with less than 50 fans, for better or for worse.

    Onita Pro (I bet you can't guess who runs this fed) is probably one of the most fascinating sleaze-adjacent feds ever (feels weird to call a promotion full-on sleazy when they've Korakuen as much as Onita Pro has). It's a pure distillation of the Japanese indie scene of the time, with guys from promotions you've never heard of getting some of their only chances to work in front of larger crowds, let alone to make it onto TV. Where else would you find an underground juniors tag followed up by a UNW offer match? Onita has always been a guy with a really special vision for wrestling (one that I absolutely adore), and the fact that he spent 1999 having explosion deathmatches in NJPW while also booking a promotion with a murderer's row of sleaze scene names as regulars is truly why he's the GOAT.

    Even though I love Onita Pro as a concept and I've really enjoyed the matches I've seen from it, I've only seen maybe two full shows. I've always wanted to do a deep dive into the fed, going through every single taped event to experience Onita's vision in full, so why not write about it? I have no idea what type of schedule these posts will follow, but I'm hoping to get a review out every two weeks at the very least. Who knows, maybe I'll get distracted with a homework assignment and take another year to do a blog post again. Onto the review!

Yusaku vs. Rey Pandita

    Who the fuck is Rey Pandita? Cagematch says that Violencia and Flying Kid Ichihara worked under the gimmick at different points, but it's 100% neither of those guys. I guess the world may never know. Yusaku is here though, so I am a happy man. He's only a year into wrestling too! Sadly he's given the jobber entrance treatment, but I can't imagine Korakuen Hall going wild for a Yusaku Shimoda entrance in 1999. He's wearing all gold gear with a bleach blonde mullet though, so he looks like a much cooler Shane Douglas. Pandita comes out wearing a burger king crown throwing candy into the crowd, which is a great first image for a promotion's first ever taped show.

    This follows the basic formula of agility versus power, as Pandita has some lucha acumen and Yusaku really likes Vader. He's already got some pounds on him too, although he's not yet reached the level of BIG that he would ten years later, so his power level is much lower. Pandita commits to styling on Yusaku throughout this match, including psyching him out on a dive only to slap Yusaku on the back. This confuses Yusaku, who thinks his brother Daisaku did it, and gives him a big shove. To Pandita, this is all fun and games, but he may have just sown the seeds for a family to rip itself apart.

    Pandita continues to style on Yusaku until he misses a moonsault. Yusaku promptly picks him up and casually crushes him with a pumphandle emerald flowsion for a two. Yusaku then goes for a lariat but gets drop toe hold'd by Pandita, and then Pandita does a Gedo Clutch while posing for the cameras to get the win.

    This was a perfectly fine piece of work, albeit weirdly paced with a few odd moments, especially the finish which just kind of happened. Yusaku was fine though, and Pandita styling on him was fun. Hopefully Pandita can showcase his abilities in MUGA-esque matwork on the next show.

Match Rating: C+

Asian Cougar & Phantom Funakoshi vs. Exciting Yoshida & Takashi Sasaki

    DDT! One of Onita Pro's defining traits was the massive presence of DDT on all of the shows. I guess Onita was just a big fan of Sanshiro Takagi's vision, something I'm very thankful for because this got us some of the first TV exposure for the DDT crew (outside of having show highlights appear on STV news broadcasts).

    This match is... good. I'm gonna do some individual performance breakdowns here because this match was basically just all four guys trying to get themselves over, they still worked together and cooperated to do moves but it was pretty obvious that the main goal for these guys was to try and get booked on more Onita Pro shows.

    Takashi Sasaki is probably the weakest guy here. You can kinda feel it with how he's wrestling, but he's in a lab mindset, just busting out random moves and seeing what works. He does some nice kicks and hits a few gross diving knees, but he also does some weird suplex gutbuster things and hits a diving knee drop 69-style, so it just looks like he's trying to diving teabag Funakoshi. Sasaki also never hit the D-Geist for some reason, even though he was absolutely doing the move by this time. Maybe one of those fucked up suplexes was an attempt at it? I couldn't tell you.

    Cougar's also not a faultless worker here, but he's got a much better idea of who he is, busting out some of his trademark wild leg drops. There's this great moment in the latter half where Funakoshi has Sasaki gripped by the neck while he's laying on the apron, trapping him there for Cougar to hit the guillotine leg drop. It kinda felt like a moment from a gorey horror movie where the killers hold a guy down while one of them chops his leg off, and you just have to watch the poor guy squirm around and suffer. Cougar isn't perfect in this match when it comes to execution though, and the crowd laughs at him a few times for his botches. He also doesn't do his biggest signature spot (the tope atomico suicida). It's Korakuen! Do the spot!!!

    Exciting Yoshida does some awesome Animal Hamaguchi stuff and throws sick ass headbutts, but also hits an insane spinning tombstone and a big diving leg drop. Sasaki kicks him a bunch and he sells by slowly falling over every time. He's a bomb-thrower, but also an easy one to beat up. Not much else to say, wrestling needs more glass cannons like Yoshida. 

    And then Phantom is the coolest wrestler ever. He's a hardcore lover of 70s wrestling, so all of his high spots are indian deathlocks and snapmares. Every time the match felt like it was about to go too far into experimenting and botching, Funakoshi would tag in and hit a few suplexes and suddenly all is right in the world. Sasaki can invent as many bad moves as he wants because Funakoshi knows the exact time he needs to trip Sasaki and do a japanese rolling leg clutch to pull me right back in. He hit a release tiger suplex that nearly killed Sasaki and I sprung out of my chair like a jack-in-the-box.

    The finish ends up being with Sasaki and Cougar, but they luckily keep it short and sweet. Sasaki nails a real disgusting lariat for a two count, and then Cougar counters an attempt at another one into a cross-arm german suplex for the three. Sasaki, of course, immediately no-sells the move to get up and complain to the ref that he kicked out. Man, Sasaki really wants  me to hate him, huh?

    In a strange way, this felt like it was both overambitious and underachieving. They had all the pieces to put together a great match, and ended up only completing half of the puzzle. At the same time, it felt like one guy was using the rest of the pieces to try and create a whole new puzzle. Does this analogy make sense? Whatever. Good little match, even if I know it could've been much more. I pray that Funakoshi keeps popping up on Onita Pro shows going forward. Damnit, I just remembered he's retiring later this month and now I'm sad. God bless you Phantom.

Match Rating: B

Street Fight: Yoshiko Tamura & Yuka Nakamura vs. Crusher Maedomari & Shark Tsuchiya

    Putting these four in a street fight is inspired. Onita just can't be beat. I don't know if I've ever seen Tamura or Nakamura in this type of environment so I'm already very excited. They slot into it well with their street fighter gear, which just looks like they're going into a very fashionable war. Maedomari and Tsuchiya respond with black shirts and black pants. "This is no time for fashion", they say. "This is a time for bloodshed."

    Maedomari and Tsuchiya jump the faces before the bell rings and we're off to the races. Lots of brawling around the ring, most of it isn't worth talking about but everything Tsuchiya does rules. Tsuchiya beats the hell outta scared little Nakamura like she owes her money and smashes a microphone into her face a bunch. Then a little later on she goes wild on both women with a barbed wire sword. I love Shark Tsuchiya so much. Maedomari is cool too though! She and Tsuchiya (I can't not talk about Tsuchiya) do some crazy tag moves throughout, culminating with a gut kick/snap backdrop driver that's as funny and as violent as it sounds.

    I guess I should talk about Tamura and Nakamura too. They were fine! Nakamura is good at getting beat up, and I love how she sells for the Tsuchiya sword attack like she's just been cut in half in one of those old samurai movies. She also throws some absolutely awful punches at one point, but redeems herself with a crazy ass roll-up counter out of a chokeslam. Tamura is alright as well, albeit I remember like nothing she did besides screaming a lot. Not in a "I'm in pain" kind of way, just screaming whenever she got the chance to. Why do so many joshi wrestlers do that? Can they please stop?

    Maedomari wins the match for her team with a gross chokeslam, and she even sits on Nakamura and counts the three with her fingers because some of Tsuchiya's coolness has rubbed off on her. Not a ton to complain about here, just a fun little match. Tsuchiya is the best and I hate everyone that hates her.

Match Rating: B

Dr. Hannibal & Dr. Luther vs. Katsuji Ueda & Sanshiro Takagi

    Hey, it's the funny internet guy! The guy that goes Blehhhhh~ in AEW! Is Luther culturally relevant anymore? Deadlock haven't mentioned him in at least a year. Anyways, he's here with fellow weird Canadian Hannibal (different from the other weird Canadian Hannibal wrestling today) and they're facing a real kickboxer (Katsuji Ueda) and a fake Steve Austin (Sanshiro Takagi). Onita, vision, etc. Hannibal and Luther come out and do the chaotic running through the crowd shit, except they're in straight jackets and keep trying to headbutt people. I already hate Dr. Hannibal because he's literally just walking around with his head turned sideways and that's it. This guy is a phony. Dr. Luther meanwhile is throwing chairs into the crowd and threatening fans, like a real worker.

    I don't even know how to talk about this match. Ueda does kickboxing to Dr. Hannibal and Dr. Hannibal responds with bad strikes and his shitty sideways neck stance because he has no idea how to be a psychopath. Luther and Takagi tag in and they work at a really fast pace before doing a pretty wild brawl on the outside. Luther has become le funny internet wrestler guy but he was actually pretty damn awesome in Japan, and Takagi is a deceptively good wrestler for a guy who's only really known for liking Stone Cold.

    Eventually they get back in the ring and Takagi pulls out MR. SOCKO, APPLYING THE MANDIBLE CLAW TO DR. LUTHER. The WWF had a stranglehold on Sanshiro Takagi's life in 1999. He hits a few other moves before trying to win with a meh impaler DDT, only for Dr. Hannibal to throw what looked like a full cup of powder into his face. Luther hits a German Suplex for a 2.9, and then Hannibal comes back in and dumps even more powder on Takagi. I wonder if this is how British Bulldog looked when Bret found him before Summerslam 1992. Katsuji Ueda runs in to stop Hannibal's cocaine-based assault with some kicks that probably hurt like a bitch. Then Luther hits a genuinely great kneel kick and a rope-walk bulldog and wins.

    Takagi cuts a promo after and challenges the two psychopaths (well, one psychopath and one pretender) to face him and Exciting Yoshida in a street fight on the next Onita Pro show. This was just really bizarre. Luther was honestly the standout with his antics and actually good wrestling (albeit the move he won with really didn't feel like a finisher). Takagi was fine and him just ripping off WWF moves was funny. Ueda did kickboxing and I like kickboxing so I can't complain about him. Dr. Hannibal offends me on a spiritual level and I could probably do a better job of wrestling than he ever did. Please find a real psychopath like Luther to replace this stain.

Match Rating: C-

No Rope Barbed Wire Street Fight: Atsushi Onita, Sambo Asako, & Shigeo Okumura vs. Genichiro Tenryu, Ichiro Yaguchi, & Shoji Nakamaki

    No reason to have a big opening explanation for this match. If you're reading the blog, you most likely know who all of these people are. At bare minimum, you know who Onita and Tenryu are. That's all you need going into this.

    I fucking love this match. The first time I saw this was in a random late-night voice call with a few friends. None of us had seen this match before and I thought it sounded great on paper, so I just threw it on. We rewatched the match at least two more times within the span of 24 hours. It felt like striking oil in your backyard while digging up some weeds. What we thought would be a fun "send the fans home happy" kind of brawl between some great wrestlers ended up being one of the most chaotic, dramatic, and all-around insane matches I've ever seen.

    There was way too much going on here to try and properly run down everything, so instead, here's a list of some notable spots:

- Tenryu holding Onita's head down and repeatedly punching him in the forehead

- Onita doing the classic baseball slide wire dodge only for Tenryu to do his own into Onita's face (countering baseball with baseball)

- Yaguchi vanishing from view for a few minutes only to reappear bathed in blood

- Tenryu throwing a chair into Asako's face really hard

- Okumura saving Asako from more damage by rushing Tenryu and then punching him a bunch in the face

- Onita swinging a table onto the top of Nakamaki's head like Whac-A-Mole

- Okumura choking Tenryu with his wrist tape (Okumura felt like the best mid-tier Memphis brawler ever in this match)

- Yaguchi DYING

    And that list is less than half of the craziest shit that happened. The match never slowed down, just constantly bashing you over the head with violence and chaos like the many chairs bashed over the head of Sambo Asako. Now, there were a solid handful of moments that you could call "botches" or "mistakes", and I'll happily admit that some of them were probably not planned. But if you see these moments and think "this makes the match worse", you're stupid. This is a fight, a brawl, and brawls are messy. Brawls are uncoordinated. Brawls aren't about doing everything perfectly, they're about trying to do anything you can to hurt who you're fighting. Of course you're gonna slip up every now and then, that's just a part of brawling. What matters is how you recover, and every single time a "mistake" happened, not only did it usually still look insane, it was also always recovered from incredibly well.

    I think the spirit of this match comes through the most in a spot near the halfway point. Onita and Tenryu are down, already broken by the damage dealt to both of them so far in the match. As they both start to get up, Tenryu notices a chair, immediately grabs it, and lunges over to throw it into Onita's face. It's the type of moment that takes this from a wild chaotic brawl into something with a real sense of spite and fury behind it. Before watching this match, I believed in Tenryu and I believed in Onita. Hell, I believed in everyone here. Spots like this are why I believe in the match itself.

    No rundown of the finish, because you really just need to see it for yourself. In fact, you need to see this whole match for yourself! It's up there as one of the best Onita brawls ever, and if you enjoy those matches in any way, shape, or form, you have to watch this. Life-changing pro wrestling.

Match Rating: A+

    In terms of the show as a whole, this was a mixed bag. I don't think anything on the show was truly bad (outside of everything Dr. Hannibal did), but there was a lot that never really moved me. As it stands, it felt like a good starting point for Onita Pro. Most of the less interesting stuff feels like it'll naturally get better with time. The DDT crew will complete their individual journeys of self-discovery, Onita will book better women to lose to Maedomari & Tsuchiya, and Pandita will only grow stronger in his ability to style on people. Add onto all of that one of the best matches ever in the main event, and I feel like this show left me pretty satisfied in the end. I'm excited to see where we go from here.

Show Rating: B