Showing posts with label Tatsuhito Takaiwa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tatsuhito Takaiwa. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Spitball Reviews #8

           (Written by jom)

    Another Spitball, another Greed match. I told you we'd be talking about him again! SED is here in a random gymnasium with the world's largest inflatable dinosaur in the background. I respect SED for making sure this show is accessible to all, even those of us who are 25 feet tall and made of PVC. This time around, Greed's in a tag with regular partner Higuchi, who looks like Greed's childhood friend that has tried to kind of clean up his act as he's grown up. He's not entirely out of the hoodlum mindset, but he's just trying to be presentable in job interviews. Yuki Toshima looks like any average indie guy in the US from 2006 to 2008, but Big Joe is anything but average. He's BIG. No false advertising here, this guy is at least a foot taller than everyone else in the ring. And wouldn't you know it, Greed delivers once again! This is a fun little tag match with lots of cool moments, mostly courtesy of Greed. He's really in the zone here with his shitheadedness, starting the match by going at Joe's eyes and never really letting up on his fouling and general misbehavior. He gets Higuchi involved and Higuchi always plays his part well, albeit he really only goes for heel stuff when Greed tells him to. Really, Higuchi and Toshima (who I exclusively called "red pants" in my notes) only exist to do solid enough juniors wrestling. Big Joe is the other star of the match for sure, throwing Greed around like a sack of shit and living up to his role as a big fucker. His interactions with Higuchi are pretty good as well, culminating in him letting loose with Vader hammers and a huge Amaze Impact. Really though, this is the Greed show for me. He's just so wonderful peppering in nasty kicks and stomps, like how he breaks up a crab done by Big Joe by just kicking him in the back of the head. Greed would've been wonderful working in actual pro feds, ideally as a midcard fouler in Z1 or BJW around this time. Even if we never got that, I'm happy to keep going through all the Greed footage going forward. Fun stuff all around, recommend checking it out just to see Greed, Big Joe, and the even bigger dinosaur. 

Match Rating: B

Masao Ando vs. Yuji Yoshida (Bukotsu 09/25/2016)

    Now this is that indie shit we all know and love. Two lumpy divorcees wearing bikers and kickpads laying into each other with unrelenting violence for a somewhat apathetic crowd in a small rec center in Osaka. If you had asked me about three years ago, I would probably call this a pure distillation of jomcore; my tastes have changed a lot since then, but this type of wrestling does still hold a precious place in my heart. This match does a lot to remind me of why I loved these kinds of matchups so much, working out to be the world's grimiest dick measuring contest. It's filled with full-force elbows to the nose and kicks to the jaw, along with crushing suplexes aplenty. It's also as much an auditory experience as it is a visual one: every strike has either a slap that reverberates around the room, or a thud that smashes through your soul. There's a ton of roughness in everything these guys do, with lots of moves being centimeters away from disaster. There's one moment in particular where Ando hoists up Yoshida for a waterwheel drop, and Yoshida, having seemingly never even heard of a waterwheel, doesn't even try to protect himself and nearly gets spiked on the top of his head. I've talked about it here before, but this kind of dangerous sloppiness does a lot to add to the match. The work doesn't feel clean, safe, or pre-planned, which is exactly how a brawl should feel. There are some attempts at through-lines in this match, specifically Masao Ando's attempts to apply some sort of armwork to Yoshida as things progress, but none of that really matters in any way. I respect Ando's attempts at giving this match some sort of story besides caveman MMA, but sometimes you don't need wrestling with any real brains behind it. The only brains in this match are the ones getting pinball'd around inside the skulls of these two men. The only thing that hampers this match is Yoshida's tendency to just stand around for extended periods while in control, but other than that, this is a real kickass match for people that like seeing asses kicked.

Match Rating: B+

Takahiro Tababa vs. Tatsuhito Takaiwa (IMPACT 05/04/2018)

    A pretty big match for Tababa, getting the chance to face the guy who beat his ass in his debut match three years ago. It's his opportunity to show how much he's grown in the relatively short amount of time he's been a professional wrestler. Takaiwa, however, comes into this match with an entirely different mindset. Honestly, he seems to work this match as an attempt to undo the past and force Tababa out of wrestling. The way Takaiwa grapples with Tababa reminds me of the old tales of veteran workers in the 70s and 80s pulling hopeful trainees into the ring and stretching them half to death until they quit, leaving their dreams and money behind. He pulls off a ton of sugar holds and keeps searching for ways to grind down Tababa, like turning a grounded half nelson into the world's most painful crucifix. It's genuinely very stunning to see Takaiwa work like this; the guy's always had a mean streak to him, but it usually only manifested in particularly impactful bombs or even more punch behind his hits. All of that is still present here, but it's the way he rips apart Tababa on the mat that makes this stand out as one of his meanest performances ever. Tababa's eventual comebacks all land real well (it certainly helps that most of them are based around him kicking the hell out of Takaiwa), and he does a good job of milking his hope spots for all they're worth. His bombs also work out great, especially everything surrounding his holds. The moment where Takaiwa counters a Fujiwara armbar by sidewalk slamming him only for Tababa to maintain the hold really stands out as great endurance storytelling and makes Tababa look like a total badass. Wrap it all up nicely with a bow made of some truly spectacular late-match bombs and you've got yourself a damn good match. Hopefully there's more "burn your boots" Takaiwa performances out there.

Match Rating: B

Ryan Upin vs. Masked Mystery (GUTS World 02/15/2011)

    Ryan Upin is probably better known as Chon Shiryu, who I've somehow never talked about on the blog?? Absolute blasphemy on my part. If you've ever seen me talk about him elsewhere you probably already know this, but I really love Chon Shiryu. He's one of the only guys in the world doing kung fu pro wrestling, and his level of consistency is pretty mindblowing. He almost has the Thanomsak Toba condition, where, even when put in matches featuring complete shitters, you can always count on him to at least deliver the goods. Luckily, Masked Mystery is nowhere near a shitter, so this ends up being a total blast. Mystery is a somewhat conventional big man worker who has very good technique and clearly knows how to work a short match, which works perfectly with the smaller and more exciting Shiryu. They work this like a pretty high level TV match, streamlining everything to give you as many cool moments as possible all while keeping the action flowing at the right pace. There's tons of little moments interspersed between the cool big spots, like Mystery keeping one leg away from Shiryu's grasp while Shiryu goes for a gory special, so Shiryu just dumps Mystery onto the ropes with the half-applied move. But really, we're here for the big kung fu moments, and Shiryu gives us plenty with suicide flying kicks and springboard kung fu stomps. I think this match is probably one of the stronger testaments to one of the best aspects of Chon Shiryu. Even while working one of the more bizarre and unique characters in the Japanese scene, Shiryu actually feels like one of the most cohesive workers in the entire world. There are a lot of guys nowadays that have "but also"'s tacked onto their character descriptions. A big man that does power moves BUT ALSO dives and flips. A high flyer that can hit spectacular flips and twists BUT ALSO big powerbombs and every other move in the book. Chon Shiryu lacks a "but also" in his character description because everything he does feels so fitting for him. The kung fu, the gory special variations, even the way he'll grapple all work towards supporting this character of pro wrestling's one true kung fu master. In the end, this match barely clocks in at six minutes, and it's a damn fun six minutes at that. The only reason it doesn't go into the A-range is because this felt like it needed a better environment than a small dojo (ideally an actual TV studio with a more vocal crowd). I patiently await the day that a promotion finally opens its eyes and signs Shiryu to work compact TV matches on a regular basis.

Match Rating: B+

Isami vs. Phantom Funakoshi (IWA Kokusai 06/12/2005)

    I'm fairly certain this was uploaded by Goro Tsurumi's son. Thank you Goro Jr! I love Kokusai a lot for its bizarre monster matches and crazy arena brawls, but it did always feature some great indie junior heavy guys, both fresh in the scene and old but underappreciated. Isami is the new kid on the block after absconding from K-DOJO and transforming from a Takadist shooter into a scummy yankee, while Funakoshi has been around for years as a Showa-era wrestling idolizer. It's a bizarre pairing, but one that could have a lot of potential by virtue of the two being great wrestlers. Emphasis on could. I'm sure they've had a very good match together. They've faced off multiple times, and at least one of those times has given us a very good match. This is not that time. This is less of a wrestling match and more of a wrestling experiment, a public survey to see if certain angles can go off well. This starts with one of the most bizarre wrestling angles I've seen in a long time, where Funakoshi takes a rolling solebutt 30 seconds into the match that stops him dead in his tracks. He's stunlocked so long that Isami has time to do the full Sweet Chin Music charge-up and still hit the move, all while Funakoshi is just standing there bent over like he just knocked back a pack of original Four Loko's. This leads to Funakoshi being so knocked out that Isami has to abandon a suicide dive spot (?) and go out to try and wake him up (??), only for Funakoshi to wake up and start being incredibly aggressive. I genuinely cannot tell if this is meant to be some bizarre worked shoot injury angle or some sort of concussion work or anything. It's borderline nonsensical, something you can only vaguely interpret. The actual match that follows is... fine I guess? Funakoshi does some alright bullying and armwork, and there's a cool enough spot where Isami takes too long getting back into the ring after a corner knee sends him flying out that Funakoshi pretty easily dodges his returning superkick and dumps him on his head with a suplex. There's just too many whiffs and botches and weird angles to really even process what's going on half the time. The match goes to a "15 minute time limit draw" when the actual runtime was barely 12 minutes, only to then be restarted and continue with the weird botches and vacant atmosphere (there were barely 15 people in the building but you could've told me they were all cardboard cutouts with how this match appeared). To be clear, this isn't irredeemable wrestling: Isami and Funakoshi do enough cool stuff to warrant some commendation. That being said, this match is bad. I still don't understand why half of it happened. I respect the attempt at experimentation, and Kokusai is one of the few places you could really try to do stuff like this, but this was a complete flop.

Match Rating: D+

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Jom Catches Up on GLEAT Vol. 3 AND Vol. 4

     (Written by Jom)


    So, since I've taken such a long time to do this, I thought I might as well double up and do both of the latest volumes in one post. Prepare for your daily fill of Daijiro Matsui, Yu Iizuka, and all the other wacky boys at the GLEAT camp.

    In terms of new signings to the promotion, GLEAT has only had one, but definitely a big one in Ryuichi Kawakami from BJW. Big Japan is one of my favorite promotions, I've been following them actively for about two years now and Kawakami has always been one of my dark horse favorites. It'll feel weird to not see him in a Big Japan ring anymore, but he's been getting overlooked there for a long time and GLEAT might be the place for him to really prove himself. Also, if GLEAT really are scouting from BJW, I better hear about Kazuki Hashimoto signing with them next. That guy deserves the world and hasn't been given shit by BJW for years.

Soma Watanabe vs. Takanori Ito

    Two volumes in a row we start off with a UWFi rules battle between the future aces. Ito's been the undisputed best guy in this ruleset so far, and this was proven to Watanabe last time they fought when Ito got an emphatic victory. However, Watanabe is obviously not the same man here as he was then. He's immediately a lot more careful against Ito, keeping a certain amount of room between the two of them to avoid Ito's stellar grappling and nasty kicks. When they do engage it feels pretty tightly done, both guys put their all into looking for advantages while also stopping the other man from taking one themselves. Ito obviously has mat superiority, but not only is Watanabe better at escaping from these ground situations, he's also a lot better at strikes and his ability to absolutely pepper Ito with them cannot be denied. With all that said, his opponent is still Ito. Ito's able to fire some great strikes off whenever he's in range, throws Watanabe with some sweet suplexes, and on the ground? It's not even a question of who's better. By the ending, he forces Watanabe into a 5-2 disadvantage point-wise, making him repeatedly go to the ropes to stop Ito's chokes and leg locks. Watanabe, however, refuses to be shut out like he was in his match against Nagai. He finally gets the opening he needs and absolutely blasts Ito with slaps and knees, forcing a knockdown and a lost point for Ito. How does Ito respond? By destroying Watanabe's leg with kicks over and over and over again. Watanabe takes his own knockdown from this but doesn't give up, attempting to keep his hurt leg outside of Ito's reach. This concentration on protecting his leg comes back to bite him, as Ito throws a nasty solebutt to the unprotected stomach, knocking Watanabe down and resulting in Ito's victory via point loss. This was probably the best UWFi rules match I've seen yet, at least in my opinion. Ito continues to prove how great he is in this ruleset, and Watanabe is getting closer and closer to matching his abilities. I can't wait to see what happens in the eventual third match.

Rating: B+

Soma Watanabe/Minoru Tanaka vs. Takanori Ito/Tatsuhito Takaiwa

    Tanaka signing with GLEAT might be the best news for the new promotion so far, he's been at it for close to thirty years and honestly hasn't lost a step. Takaiwa meanwhile has been doing it for about the same amount of time and probably never had a step to lose. This isn't meant as a slight however, his style of basic wrestling, lariats, and death valley bombs is one of the biggest proofs that sometimes simpler really is better. Both men are real good in this match, as Takaiwa is able to act as a great momentum killer against the dynamic team of Watanabe and Tanaka, and Tanaka is just fucking awesome, wrestling so smoothly for a man nearly 50. Watanabe and Ito also brought the heat as usual, with both men going very hard against each other from the get-go. Ito also is able to have some really fun exchanges with Tanaka, the two men having noticeably good chemistry. The ending came with Watanabe and Takaiwa beating the hell out of each other, with Watanabe at first taking the advantage before Ito ran in and hit his ridiculously beautiful backdrop on him. Takaiwa then hit him with a brainbuster and a gross lariat, but Watanabe kicked out, so Takaiwa finally dropped him with the death valley bomb for the win. This was a run-of-the-mill tag match between four really good to great wrestlers, so if you want to see some very enjoyable tag wrestling this is the match for you.

Rating: B+

Kaz Hayashi vs. Daijiro Matsui

    Daijiro Matsui is a guy who I've been a fan of for a while, one of the last students of the UWFi dojo and a KINGDOM main-stay. He's also not had a pro wrestling match in five years and this was Hayashi's UWFi rules debut, so coming into this match while considering both those factors I was very excited if slightly worried. Luckily, I had nothing to worry about, because the flame grappler never loses his fire. Him and Hayashi's grappling the entire match was so rough and realistic, Matsui's ability being somewhat expected buy Hayashi being a pleasant surprise here. Hayashi was able to hit a great low kick to Matsui's ankle at one point, forcing him off balance and allowing Hayashi to successfully shoot for a takedown. Little details like that really make a match special. That's not to say this wasn't the Matsui show though. Even in this moment, immediately after Hayashi successfully did a takedown Matsui almost immediately took advantage on the ground. In fact, this would've been a total shut-out victory for Matsui if not for him violating DA RULEZ. At one point he had Hayashi in a perfect position and put in a heel hold, which the ref immediately broke up and gave him a yellow card and point loss for. I actually didn't know this was against the rules, so after writing this I'll go read the GLEAT rules online to make sure I don't get surprised like this again. Update: the GLEAT rules are not in english anywhere online so I had to just translate the pre-match screens using my google translate app on my phone. I also have already forgotten them, so I guess I'll just have to keep being surprised. Matsui actually benefitted from this slip-up, as it made him seem a lot more like a killer. Honestly though, with how he was throwing those kick and knees, he probably didn't need any more moments to prove that. Matsui eventually took the win by doing a back roll while holding a front necklock before transitioning into a beauty of a cross armbar. This was entirely to reintroduce the wrestling world to the flame grappler, but Hayashi perfectly hold his own and it resulted in a pretty fun slight squash match.

Rating: B+

Takanori Ito vs. Daijiro Matsui

    This is the start of Volume 4, and is also the first match in a four man UWFi tournament which will take up the entire volume. The second I heard Matsui was getting involved with GLEAT this was the match I most looked forward to, so getting to see it happen so early is pretty awesome. And you know what? I couldn't have predicted how good this would be. The beginning grappling was absolutely phenomenal, both men sprawled like their lives depended on it and it felt like a shout-out to the classic U-System sprawling I love so much. Matsui is great as a slick asshole veteran, he almost puts in a heel hold again at one point but remembers that it's against the rules, instead settling for a sick knee lock. He spent a lot of the match forcing Ito to go by his pace, which has been Ito's whole thing so far so it was a great role reversal. After getting the points at 4-2, Matsui got possibly a little too confident and tried to shoot for a takedown on Ito when he had some time to recover. Ito, because he's the GLEAT shoot prodigy, decided "fuck that and fuck you", TAKAYAMA COUNTER KNEEING HIM. This gets him a knockdown on Matsui, and immediately upon Matsui getting back up he rushes back in and lays low kicks to Matsui's thigh to force another knockdown. At this point, it doesn't matter that Matsui has years of experience over him. Ito is in his zone, and all he needs is one good chance. He throws some sick knees and hits a beautiful German suplex, finally locking in a nasty single leg crab to get the tapout victory. Y'know what I said in the first match about that being the best UWFi rules match yet? Yeah, that's already changed.

Rating: B+

Soma Watanabe vs. Yu Iizuka

    This is the second semi-final match in the UWFi tournament, and the GLEAT debut of Yu Iizuka, someone who I am unbelievably happy to see in GLEAT. A product of HEAT-UP, Iizuka is a total fucking Volk Han mark, using the twitter handle @VOLK_KID and going by the nickname "Lil Volk". However, he's somewhat earned this nickname through his quickly growing grappling abilities. Also, a little bit of trivia just for fun, Iizuka is the student of HEAT-UP's owner TAMURA, who himself is one of the U-File Camp boys (a group that includes Kotaro Nasu, Kazuki Okubo, and Masashi Takeda). Since U-File was the gym run by one Kiyoshi Tamura, it could be considered that the GLEAT president is kind of Iizuka's wrestling grandpa. Watanabe actually starts the grappling in this match, obviously wanting to maintain control in this match against the debuting Iizuka. He honestly does really well and really holds his ground, but it doesn't take long before Iizuka is able to smoothly turn Watanabe's advantages into his own. He shows his love for the Russian Wizard with some really complex and creative holds like a cutthroat side choke and a cross-legged knee crusher, along with the classic Volk wrist throws. Watanabe tries his best to take back the early control he had but all his attempts are fruitless, culminating in him throwing a high kick that gets easily caught by Iizuka, allowing him to roll under Watanabe and do a beauty of a release dragon suplex, following that up with a crossface chickenwing for the submission victory. This was a great showcase for Iizuka, and even in defeat Watanabe looked more than competent enough. He didn't lose because of a lack of skill, there's just no stopping Lil Volk.

Rating: B+

Takanori Ito vs. Yu Iizuka

    This is the finals of the UWFi tournament, and is also a match between my two favorite guys currently in GLEAT, so you know I was excited to watch this. This actually starts out with striking between the two, but both, for all their grappling ability, are also really good at that. Eventually it leads into Iizuka faking out a pump kick into a double leg attempt but Ito catches him and we're in for a fucking ground clinic. Iizuka's creativity really shines here with all the crazy holds he's able to get Ito in position for, and Ito repeatedly tries his best to shut Iizuka down. However, the emphasis is on tries, as Iizuka is able to force Ito to use three of his points on rope breaks before Ito is finally able to counter a head kick attempt with his leg sweep, locking on an achilles hold for Iizuka's first point loss of the match. Iizuka is able to do his cool leg catch roll under thing, pulling Ito into the middle of the ring and doing one of the coolest fucking submissions I've possibly ever seen. I literally cannot describe it, so here is a gif of it. Iizuka is a prodigy man. Ito is able to get to the ropes to escape this, but he's now on one point, meaning if he goes for the ropes again or takes a knockdown the match will end with Iizuka as the winner. Ito goes into full killing machine mode because of this, going nuts on Iizuka with slaps, kicks, and a disgusting series of clinch knees to the head, getting a knockdown on Iizuka that he only barely gets up from before losing by KO. Iizuka primal yells and goes to strike with Ito, but in the standing strike situation, Ito always had superiority, and throws some great kicks before doing his beautiful German suplex into a bodyscissors sleeper hold and get the submission victory. This match was such a great example of what both men can do, while also showing that both men have an absolutely bottomless well of potential. I don't think it was as good as the Matsui match, but the next time these two face off there's no way it won't be better.

Rating: B+

    Well, we've reached the end of the GLEAT volumes, at least at this point. Going forward I'll make single-match posts the day after each match is posted, along with full reviews of GLEAT shows in the future. Starting tomorrow, GLEAT will be doing a four man pro-wrestling rules tournament featuring Hayashi, Ito, Iizuka, and Watanabe, so be on the lookout for my first match review of that. Keep on GLEATing everybody.