Kagetsu Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/kagetsu/ Reviews and Wrestler Profiles from Joshi Wrestling Sun, 23 May 2021 21:55:47 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 https://i0.wp.com/joshicity.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/logo.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Kagetsu Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/kagetsu/ 32 32 93679598 Hana Kimura Memorial “MATANE” on 5/23/21 Review https://joshicity.com/hana-kimura-memorial-matane-may-23-2021-review/ Sun, 23 May 2021 21:19:20 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=18737 An event to commemorate the life of Hana Kimura.

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Hana Kimura Memorial MATANE Poster

Event: Hana Kimura Memorial “MATANE”
Date: May 23rd, 2021
Location: Tokyo Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 714
Broadcast: Streamed on FITE TV

Reviewing wrestling events can bring many different emotions, but an emotion you never want to have is sadness. I knew, like many others, that watching this event was going to be hard. A year ago today, Hana Kimura tragically passed away, and her death impacted people across the globe. Hana had everything – she was a great wrestler, charismatic, had a great look, and had fans invested in everything she did. But more importantly she was a great, loving, and incredible person that had her whole life in front of her. Having her Memorial show on the one year anniversary is fitting, as it brought new attention to the circumstances of her death and gave her friends a way to publicly celebrate her life, which I 100% support. But its going to be hard, the hardest wrestling event I’ve watched in 30 years of being a wrestling fan. Here is the card:

As you can see, a very interesting cast but it is filled with wrestlers that had a real life connection with Hana Kimura or her mother Kyoko Kimura (or both) as this memorial event is as much for them as it is for us, to say their final goodbyes. You’ll note only a few active Stardom wrestlers make an appearance, which is at least partly because Stardom opted to run an event on the same day, but that’s another topic for another time. I’m not going to do my typical review for this one as I’m probably going to be too emotionally into the event to be typing constantly, but I hope to not only discuss the matches but help newer fans that may not watch a lot of Joshi matches with who all the wrestlers are. As always, you can click on the Joshi wrestler’s name above to go straight to their profile on Joshi City.

After a musical and dance opening, the show began after a quick video montage of Hana Kimura.

HUB, Shisao, and Eisa8 vs. Shota, FUMA, and Mil Mongoose
HUB, Shisao, and Eisa8 vs. Shota, FUMA, and Mil Mongoose

Many Joshi fans are no doubt unfamiliar with the participants in the opening match, which features wrestlers from smaller indie wrestling promotions. Hana Kimura has a connection to Okinawa Pro Wrestling from before her wrestling career, and this match generally includes wrestlers that would have been regulars in Okinawa Pro when Hana Kimura was younger. On commentary they mention that HUB was one of Hana’s favorite wrestlers, HUB is also known by long time puroresu fans as Goa and Zero from his days in Osaka Pro. For what will be an emotional show, this is a good way to ease fans into it while still respecting the purpose of the event.

I haven’t watched men’s promotions in Japan with any regularity in probably five or six years, so this was a fun throwback for me as I remember these guys from when I used to review every small underground indie promotion I could find. These six all are seasoned vets and know their way around the ring, and a six wrestler tag is a pretty straight-forward opener. Shota played the Face in Peril here which made sense – its not about the quality of wrestler but everyone loves wrestlers with masks and Shota probably had the least intimidating look of everyone in the match. So he got beaten for the first third of the match by HUB and Shisao in particular until the crowd finally spurred him to get out of the match.

They wrestled this under Lucha Tag Rules, meaning a wrestler didn’t have to make a tag to no longer be the legal wrestler, they just had to bail out of the ring and reach the floor. I wish the commentators had explained this as new fans were no doubt confused on why wrestlers weren’t always tagging, but in a laid back affair like this one I doubt anyone was too concerned. After five minutes they gave up with the “focus on one wrestler” plan which was for the best as all six of these guys have cool looking moves so no reason to not show off. HUB whipping everyone with his mask tail was entertaining as was HUB in general, Hana had good taste in wrestlers as HUB was always my favorite small-time indie wrestler. Great look, great wrestler. The match ended up being the HUB Show which was the way I would I gone too, honestly he at any point in his career could have been a player in a larger promotion. In the end, HUB planted Mil Mongoose into the mat and picked up the easy three count. The winners are HUB, Shisao, and Eisa8!

For an opener, I enjoyed it, but honestly they didn’t even need the first five minutes. The Shota beatdown segment was fine but was really just filler as once that was over, they just started quickly changing the legal wrestlers while everyone got a chance to hit their moves. That part of the match was quite enjoyable, the “lucharesu” style is entertaining with its quick speed and all six know the style well so there were no hiccups. HUB was and is great, so him being featured was a big plus not just for me personally but also considering his background with Hana Kimura. Overall a fun way to kick off the show.  Mildly Recommended

Hana Kimura Memorial Matane Battle Royal
Battle Royal

This match has typical Battle Royal rules, so a person can be eliminated by pinfall, submission, or being thrown Over The Top. They started with Miyuki Takase, Chihiro Hashimoto, Ram Kaicho, Cherry, Yuki Miyazaki, Hanako Nakamori, Moeka Haruhi, Mika Iwata, DASH Chisako, Shotaro Ashino, Fuminori Abe, Menso-re Oyaji, Hagane Shinnou, Yuko Miyamoto,  Banana Senga, Tsutomu Oosugi, Gabai Ji-chan, and Lingerie Muto already in the ring, with more entrants to follow.

A quick run-down of the Joshi wrestlers among the opening group:

  • Miyuki Takase – The Ace of Actwres girl’Z, frequently wrestles in WAVE and Diana as well
  • Mika Iwata – Young wrestler from Sendai Girls’, had a feud with Hana Kimura from 2017 to 2018 that led to several fun matches
  • DASH Chisako – Veteran wrestler from Sendai Girls’
  • Chihiro Hashimoto – The Ace of Sendai Girls’
  • Ram Kaicho – Started as a child wrestler in Triple Six and went to school with Hana Kimura, she is still affiliated with Triple Six but also wrestles in Ice Ribbon
  • Cherry – Long time veteran wrestler that wrestled most of her career in DDT, currently a Freelancer
  • Yuki Miyazaki – Long time veteran wrestler from Pro Wrestling WAVE
  • Hanako Nakamori – The Ace of PURE-J
  • Moeka Haruhi – Long time Freelancer

With more wrestlers to come, it is assumed there would be some surprise entries from Hana and/or Kyoko’s past as the match progressed. In fact before the match could even start we got our first surprise, as Super Delfin makes his way down to the match. Super Delfin is a legend from indie wrestling’s past and also wrestled in New Japan, everyone knows and loves Super Delfin which I think is safe to assume includes Hana as well. The match starts pretty standard and playful, it should be noted that Battle Royals in Japan tend to be more lighthearted affairs than those in the US. But soon we get three new entries as Eiger, Andras Miyagi, and Yusuke Kodama come down! Quick recap of the Joshi wrestlers:

  • Eiger (or Aiger) – A “ghost” wrestler who officially hails from LLPW-X but mostly wrestles in Sendai Girls’, likes to scare children
  • Andras Miyagi – Also known as Cassandra Miyagi, current a Freelancer but known for her work in Sendai Girls’ and Stardom

They immediately go after Moeka, who is creeped out by the group and in short order is eliminated by them. Ram Kaicho appears to join them as they all pose together, they turn to Gabai Ji-chan but he outsmarts them and with help he pins Eiger and Yusuke Kodama, so they are eliminated as well. Ji-chan loses his cane and turns it on, as everyone in the match stands around and watches his brand of comedy. They help him eliminated Miyagi, and then hold down Ji-chan so that both are eliminated. Hana Kimura’s music starts playing as someone dressed as her comes down to the ring, and it turns out to be the cosplay legend Sakura Hirota! 

  • Sakura Hirota – Veteran from WAVE, best known for being a comedy wrestler and sometimes cosplaying as her opponents

Once Sakura is in the ring, things settle down as we get the usual Battle Royal fare (big group moves, isolated strike-fests, and the like). We do get a Super Delfin Tornado DDT and Delfin Clutch though on Menso-re Oyaji to eliminate him, which is always a pleasure, before he is quickly pinned himself. Iwata and Hirota trade kicks which is fitting as Iwata is a wrestler that had a feud with Hana Kimura, but everyone breaks them up and Sakura is the next one eliminated (along with Lingerie Muto). While I definitely appreciate Sakura’s contribution to the match, eliminating her quickly was probably a good move as once she did her Hana tribute it may have felt a little too ‘off’ to have someone in Hana’s gear hanging around the match long term.

After Miyuki Takase is eliminated a minute later, some new music plays as Jun Kasai comes down to the ring! One of the biggest hardcore legends still active in Japan, Kasai comes in with his skewers (to jam in people’s heads) which leads to the ring clearing out. Mika Iwata returns first but asks him for an autograph, which he gives before he is attacked from behind. Chihiro Hashimoto and Shotaro Ashino pair up in a Hoss Battle, but the ring slowly fills back up as Chihiro and Shotaro slam everyone. Deadlift German by Chihiro but the blob covers both of them after the move, so both are eliminated! While this happens, more music plays as ZERO1 veteran Masato Tanaka comes down to the ring!

Tanaka cleans house a bit as he eliminates Shinnou and Kodama, Miyazaki puts him in the Shy Hold but it gets broken up. Cherry gets involved but she is covered by the wrestler blob and is eliminated. Music plays again, as another legend comes to the ring – Jinsei Shinzaki! Shinzaki is from Michinoku Pro but has wrestled in WWE and New Japan as well. He goes for one of his signature moves on the majority of the wrestlers at the same time, the rope walk, but gets pushed out of the ring for his trouble and is eliminated. No one appreciates Banana Senga and Tsutomu Oosugi eliminating Shinzaki so quickly everyone pins them, eliminating the tag team as well. We get music over the loudspeaker which means a new participant – CIMA!

That is all the wrestlers we are getting as CIMA goes after Abe and eliminates him. Miyazaki goes after CIMA but gets knocked out of the ring and eliminated, and then CIMA eliminates Nakamori. CIMA doing God’s work and clearing the ring a bit as we are down to seven wrestlers. Chisako appears with a chair but Miyamoto takes it from her, Tanaka then takes the chair from him but Kasai takes it from Tanaka. Chisako dropkicks the chair into Kasai but Mika Iwata saves him. Pearl Harbor Splash by Kasai to Chisako and he gets the three count! DASH Chisako is eliminated. Miyamoto hits Iwata and Kasai with the chair but Kasai takes it and hits Miyamoto in the head with it. Iwata cradles Miyamoto afterwards, and he is eliminated! Iwata high fives Kasai but then kicks him low and tosses him from the ring, as Jun Kasai is eliminated. CIMA and Tanaka dump Iwata out of the ring to eliminate her, leaving us with three wrestlers – CIMA, Masato Tanaka, and Ram Kaicho.

Kaicho steps right up to them while CIMA and Tanaka trade shoves, they push her out of the way and continue going at it. DDT by Tanaka but CIMA hits a Lung Blower, Tanaka gets CIMA onto the apron but Ram Kaicho pushes CIMA to the apron as well. Ram Kaicho gets a running start and she dropkicks them both to the floor! Ram Kaicho is the last woman standing and is the winner!

As I mentioned a few times, Battle Royals in Japan are not serious, as no one is really claiming that Ram Kaicho could beat CIMA or Masato Tanaka in a regular match. But there is no shame in being defeated in a Battle Royal, and giving Hana’s old childhood friend the win was a touching tribute. There were fun spots throughout the match (loved seeing Super Delfin and Jinsei Shinzaki), and the surprising Mika Iwata/Jun Kasai subplot was entertaining. These matches are a little too long for my taste considering the entertaining sections are so spread out, but there were many fun moments and for fans that are familar with the wrestlers I am sure there will be something here that fans will enjoy.

Up to this point, the event has been pretty lighthearted. We started with music and dancing, a lucharesu match, and a mostly comedic Battle Royal. The tone is going to change a bit, as while the next two matches won’t be ‘downers’ they will be more serious with wrestlers that have more of a recent connection with Hana Kimura. We knew going into the show that Kagetsu was making a one-time appearance after retiring over a year ago, but we didn’t know she was bringing a special friend with her to really honor Hana the best way they knew how.

Hana Kimura Memorial Eight Person Tag
Kagetsu, Konami, Hazuki, and DEATH vs. Natsupoi, Syuri, ASUKA, and Mio Momono

I am not sure what words to use to show how special this match is. The “Stardom” team is a combination of wrestlers that Hana Kimura teamed with in her career, and by all accounts wrestlers that she was close with out of the ring as well. Kagetsu and Hazuki retired in early 2020 and late 2019 respectively, before Hana had passed. This is their first in-ring wrestling appearance since Kagetsu’s retirement event, as both left the spotlight once their careers ended. Yet here they are, teaming together one more time to honor their old Oedo Tai partner. They are with two wrestlers from Hana Kimura’s group that she formed after leaving Oedo Tai – Tokyo Cyber Squad. Konami and DEATH actually are in Oedo Tai now, but last year they wrestled in Hana’s faction. Its exciting to see them all together, but also shows just how special Hana was to them all as in normal situations this is a foursome that would never happen in 2021.

They are against four quality wrestlers with various connections to Hana. ASUKA was the closest to Hana, as they were also a tag team (when Hana wrestled outside of Stardom) and were friends. They are joined by Stardom wrestlers Natsupoi (formally Natsumi Maki) and Syuri, along with Mio Momono from Marvelous. All eight of these wrestlers are great and I am expecting a combination of tributes to Hana and the fast paced Joshi action that we are all accustomed to.

Kagetsu and Hazuki both have incorporated tie dye into their gear as a homage to Hana, giving them a fitting different look. One thing you should know about these wrestlers is that even though its a memorial match for Hana Kimura, and they are here for her, they are also incredibly competitive and no one was going to take it easy. While it is true that DEATH is more of a comedy gimmick and she did bring that to the table, at the end of the day she was far from the focus of the match as the others went in hard on each other. Seeing Hazuki again is such a treat as she was one of the most exciting wrestlers in Stardom, and the fact she seemed to have lost her passion for wrestling but still prepared for this event just really puts over how important it was to her to take part.

Kagetsu hasn’t missed a beat either and its kinda amazing that they are so good to not show an ounce of ring rust. If fans coming into the show didn’t know about the retirements, you’d have thought they were still active competitors. They didn’t go heavy with Hana-related spots, although Jungle Kyona did make a surprise appearance to pose with Konami and DEATH as she was in Tokyo Cyber Squad as well (she is currently unable to wrestle due to an injury). The fact they opted to not just make this a tribute match from bell to bell made the moments more special when they did honor Hana. Every segment was great – Kagetsu and Syuri had a quality exchange as did Mio Momono and Hazuki, and seeing Hazuki and Kagetsu do a final double tope suicida was an incredible moment. ASUKA being the wrestler that had to “overcome the odds” was a smart move due to their close connection to Hana Kimura, and their final exchange with Hazuki was well done. In the end, ASUKA took out everyone and made the cover on Hazuki, picking up the three count! Natsupoi, Syuri, ASUKA, and Mio Momono are the winners!

For fans of Stardom back in 2018, this really felt like an Oedo Tai throwback match with Kagetsu and Hazuki leading the way (with a little bit of cheating from Kyoko Kimura). I’ve said before that eight wrestler tags can make it hard for some wrestlers to shine and that was still the case here, as while Natsupoi and Syuri both hit their spots well and contributed, there are only so many opportunities and the match was simply laid out to make others shine. ASUKA, Hazuki, and Kagetsu all looked incredible and you’d have thought from watching this that these eight had wrestled many times before, due to the fluidity and pace they kept up. Mio Momono was the stealth star of the match, she not only is fierce but is sneakily charismatic and draws attention to whatever she is doing. While this may have been a bit better as a six wrestler tag due to the length of the match, the Oedo Tai/Tokyo Cyber Squad team needed four to really salute Hana Kimura so no complaints from me. This would have been an A+ match from me regardless just for the joy of seeing Kagetsu and Hazuki again, but when taking into account the meaning behind the match both for fans and the participants, its a no-breaker recommendation to watch.  Highly Recommended

On paper, that was the main event of the evening, but ASUKA had other plans. After the match, they challenged Kagetsu to a singles match, which needed approval from Kyoko Kimura and the crowd. All parties naturally agreed, so we are ending the show with a special first-time singles match between ASUKA and Kagetsu!

ASUKA vs. Kagetsu
ASUKA vs. Kagetsu

I already discussed some of what made these two special to Hana Kimura, but since they are wrestling again I’ll go a bit more into it. Kagetsu and Hana Kimura were both friends and foes in Stardom – they started as friends when they were in Oedo Tai together and held both the Trios and Tag titles as a team. Hana eventually turned on Kagetsu, leading to them feuding off and on for the better part of a year. Overall, they had almost 100 matches either with or against each other from 2016 to 2020, and were close outside of the ring as well. ASUKA and Hana’s in-ring connection didn’t start until later in Hana’s career, as they first teamed in late 2018. As the tag team FloÜrish they never won any titles, but put on entertaining matches in both WRESTLE-1 and WAVE. Their last match together was in 2019, as once Hana signed full time with Stardom she wrestled less in other promotions. Still, judging from social media, ASUKA and Hana stayed close and remained friends. A very fitting main event for Hana’s Memorial show.

ASUKA and Kagetsu clearly felt the best way to honor Hana Kimura was to put on a banger, and that is exactly what they did. Kagetsu was flying outside the ring like it was 2019 all over again, and ASUKA laid in the strikes hard. I have to respect their cardio as both were just in a match, then immediately jumped into a singles match without missing a beat. Kagetsu went out of her way to put over ASUKA, as ASUKA handled all of her offense while dishing out plenty in return. Which shows the level of unselfishness that Kagetsu has – she frequently put other wrestlers over even when she didn’t “have” to and knowing she is retired, she lost nothing by taking all of ASUKA’s offense. That’s not to say it was a one-side match as it was far from it – Kagetsu got to use the Oedo Tai board and nailed the Oedo Coaster for old time’s sake as they went back and forth, but once ASUKA got back in control the match was over. After a Blue Thunder Bomb, heel kick, chokeslam, and the Benibana Koromo, ASUKA was able to hold down Kagetsu for the three count. ASUKA is the winner!

A really entertaining sprint as they took their short time and did everything with it. ASUKA’s kiss to the sky before drilling Kagetsu with the Benibana Koromo was the perfect tribute, as they treated the match like a “regular” match but the meaning was always there – this was for Hana. Kagetsu returning from retirement to put on two great matches is pretty incredible, and she delivered everything in this match. The strikes, the pace, the heart, everything was there. And ASUKA was able to keep up, they have really been killing it the last couple years and hopefully this will give ASUKA more attention which is no doubt what Kagetsu wanted, and also what Hana Kimura would have wanted. A fantastic match to end a very memorable event.  Highly Recommended

After the main event, things got very emotional as Kagetsu spoke and a longer video package was shown with clips from Hana Kimura’s career. Once the video package was over, back to a live view of the ring, Kyoko Kimura was standing alone and holding a photo of Hana. Jungle Kyona performed the ten bell salute while the wrestlers stood at ringside, with their heads down as they no doubt were saying their own silent goodbyes. The video concluded with a video package with dozens of wrestlers from around the globe saying “Matane,” in memory of Hana.

The post Hana Kimura Memorial “MATANE” on 5/23/21 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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18737
Natsu Sumire Produce Forever on 12/15/19 Review https://joshicity.com/natsu-sumire-produce-forever-december-15-2019-review/ Mon, 11 May 2020 20:10:02 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=16517 Hazuki and Kagetsu team for the last time!

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Natsu Sumire Produce Forever Poster

Event: Natsu Sumire Produce Forever
Date: December 15th, 2019
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 361

When this event was first announced, little did we know how special it would be. For her show, Natsu Sumire invited all her Oedo Tai buddies, which would end up being the last time they ever teamed together as Hazuki would retire later in the month. On top of that, Kagetsu retired not long afterwards too so it really was the end of an era. Unlike in Stardom, here Oedo Tai was given the send-off they deserved, as they battle random wrestlers from other promotions in unique match-ups in three different matches. That’s the main interest from the event but we also get Jamie Hayter teaming with CIMA, which seems wacky and fun. I’ll only be reviewing the Joshi matches, so here are the Joshi matches on the card:

As this event was only released on DVD, all matches will be shown in full. The Joshi wrestlers on the show have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their names above to go straight to it.

Aoki Itsuki and Miyuki Takase vs. Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire
Aoki Itsuki and Miyuki Takase vs. Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire

The show begins with Oedo Tai against two random wrestlers from different promotions. Miyuki Takase represents Actwres girl’Z but also wrestles in a lot of other promotions as well, finding success in SEAdLINNNG, WAVE, and Marvelous. She comes into the match as the AgZ Champion, so she won’t be getting pinned here. She teams with the young Aoki Itsuki, who started in REINA but since 2018 has been a Freelancer wrestling in various promotions. She hasn’t found nearly as much success as her partner, but hopefully she can up her game in this special environment.

Takase and Natsuko start the match, they lock up and Takase applies a headlock, and she works it down to the mat. Natsuko gets out of the hold after a moment and they return to their feet to trade elbows, hard shoulderblock by Natsuko but Takase fires back with a dropkick. Both wrestlers tag out as Natsu and Aoki come in, but Takase stays in as well as they double team Natsu. Aoki hits a body block to Natsu before Takase follows with a dropkick, Aoki jumps down on Natsu’s back and Takase then hops on her back to apply even more pressure. Takase finally leaves, Aoki Irish whips Natsu to the corner but Natsu reverses it. Natsu gets the microphone to cut a mid-match promo, I assume she is offering a bribe to Aoki, but its all a ruse as Natsu kicks Aoki in the back. Takase is apparently mad that Aoki was going to accept it and has walked most the way up the ramp, while Natsu and Natsuko double team Aoki while she is in the ropes. Big boot by Natsu to the back of Aoki’s head, cover by Natsu but it gets a two count. Natsu sits down Aoki in the corner and hits the gyrating Bronco Buster before tagging in Natsuko. Chops by Natsuko in the corner as Takase finally makes it back to the apron, cover by Natsuko but it gets two. Aoki fires back with an elbow and the two trade blows, scoop slam by Natsuko and she covers Aoki again for a two count. Natsu comes in the ring but Aoki hits shoulderblocks on both of them, she goes off the ropes and hits a double shoulderblock on both of them.

Aoki Itsuki and Miyuki Takase vs. Natsuko Tora and Natsu SumireShe tags in Takase, dropkick by Takase to Natsuko and she hits a second one. Takase chops and elbows Natsuko in the corner, Natsu tries to help but gets chopped for her trouble. Takase goes back to Natsuko and hits a dropkick out of the corner, lariat by Takase and she hits a diving elbow strike for a two count cover. Takase picks up Natsuko but Natsuko hits a spinning backfist, Samoan Drop by Natsuko and she gets a two count. Takase knocks Natsuko back but Natsuko catches her with an uppercut, she goes off the ropes and both wrestlers lariat each other without going down. Takase goes off the ropes and drops Natsuko with a lariat but Natsuko hits a spear and both are down on the mat. Natsu comes in and knocks Aoki off the apron, she makes it back in time for Natsuko to tag her and Natsu boots Takase while she is in the ropes. Cutie Special by Natsu, but Aoki breaks it up with a double kneedrop. Aoki picks up Natsu and hits a STO, Takase jumps on Aoki’s shoulders and she hits a falling body press. Leg drop by Takase, and she covers Natsu for two when Natsuko breaks it up. Backbreaker by Natsu to Takase before Natsuko hits a running leg drop, cover by Natsu but Aoki breaks it up. Double Irish whip to Aoki but Aoki hits a double lariat, Takase goes off the ropes but Natsu has gotten her whip and hits Takase with it. The referee stops her from using her again which gives Aoki time to run in and lariat her, Takase gets Natsu on her shoulders and hits a rolling fireman’s carry slam followed by a diving legdrop for two. Takase picks up Natsu and delivers a tornado vertical suplex, and she picks up the three count! Aoki Itsuki and Miyuki Takase are the winners.

This was an interesting mixture of comedy and seriousness, which is perfectly fine for an opening match. I haven’t seen much from Aoki Itsuki but she was really solid here and didn’t seem out of place, which can sometimes happen with wrestlers that mostly hover in smaller indies. Natsu is a treasure, as she doesn’t really have any issue transitioning from funny to serious and can hold her own even while playing around. They had enough time that everyone had a chance to shine, and they kept the pace up to keep it interesting. A solid opener.  Mildly Recommended

Hazuki and Kagetsu vs. Kaho Kobayashi and Takumi Iroha
Hazuki and Kagetsu vs. Kaho Kobayashi and Takumi Iroha

If I was going to just make up a Joshi match I really wanted to see, this would probably be it. Hazuki and Kagetsu need no introduction, they have been the heart of Oedo Tai since mid-2018 and will forever be linked due to their strong bond. This would be the last time they ever wrestled as a duo together (they are also both in the main event) and they have chosen some interesting opponents. Takumi Iroha is the Ace of Marvelous and a former champion in Pro Wrestling WAVE, she originally trained in Stardom so she has some history with Hazuki as well. She teams with Kaho Kobayashi, who is an underrated Freelancer that has also wrestled in Mexico, giving her a wide range of wrestling tricks. This is quite the match and I expect all four to really bring it.

After some false starts we finally get started with Kaho squaring off with Hazuki, they go into a fast paced exchange ending with a Kaho dropkick. Kaho goes off the ropes but Kagetsu trips her from the floor and pulls her out of the ring. Hazuki pulls Takumi out of the ring too as they battle around the floor, Kagetsu tosses Kaho back in and Hazuki greets her with a scoop slam. Kagetsu picks up Kaho, scoop slam by Kagetsu and she tags Hazuki back in. Hazuki slams Kaho again before Kagetsu returns to the ring, double drop toehold and and they kick Kaho in the back before hitting a double senton. Kagetsu covers Kaho, but it gets two. Snapmare by Kagetsu which lands Kaho in the ropes, she tags in Hazuki and Hazuki stands on Kaho’s back. Running boot to the back of the head by Hazuki, bootscrapes by Hazuki and she hits another running boot. Hazuki tags in Kagetsu who gets a drink of water, Irish whip by Kagetsu and she spits the water in Kaho’s face. She spits water in the face of Takumi and the referee too for good measure, she goes back to Kaho but Kaho fights back with elbows. Kaho goes off the ropes but Kagetsu slides out of the ring and trips her, Hazuki runs over and hits a slingshot footstomp to Kaho’s back. Swandive footstomp by Kagetsu, she elbows Kaho but again Kaho fights back.

Irish whip by Kagetsu but Kaho delivers a tilt-a-whirl headscissors followed by a dropkick. That gives her time to tag in Takumi, kick combination by Takumi and she hits a PK and a dropkick. Takumi picks up Kagetsu but Hazuki interrupts her, Takumi suplexes both of them and turns her attention back to Kagetsu. She goes off the ropes but Hazuki knees her from the apron, Kagetsu rolls up Takumi from behind but it gets a two count. Swandive missile dropkick by Hazuki, she throws Takumi in the corner and hits a running elbow. Codebreaker by Hazuki, and she covers Takumi for two. Armtrap crossface by Hazuki while Kagetsu keeps Kaho back, but Takumi gets into the ropes for the break. Hazuki slaps at Takumi and goes off the ropes, but Takumi kicks her in the chest. snap vertical suplex by Takumi and she covers Hazuki for two. Takumi picks up Hazuki but Hazuki elbows her and the two trade blows, kick combination by Takumi and she delivers a superkick. Hazuki fires back a big boot, DDT by Hazuki but Takumi blocks her hurricanrana attempt and plants her with a powerbomb for a two count. Boot by Hazuki but Takumi returns fire with a superkick, and both wrestlers are down on the mat. They both manage to tag out, dropkick by Kaho but Kagetsu dropkicks her back. Another dropkick by Kaho and she hits a third, sending Kagetsu into the ropes.

Kaho goes up top and hits a missile dropkick, cover by Kaho but it gets two. Kaho goes for the fisherman suplex but Kagetsu blocks it, Hazuki boots Kaho and Kagetsu hits a Codebreaker. Backstabber by Hazuki to Kaho, Kagetsu nails the Ebisu Drop but Kaho gets her shoulder up on the cover. Kagetsu picks up Kaho and hits another Ebisu Drop in front of the corner, she goes up top but Takumi runs in and joins her. Superplex by Takumi and Kaho hits an enzuigiri. Fisherman suplex hold by Kaho, but Kagetsu kicks out. Kaho twists up Kagetsu in a modified armbar but Kagetsu gets a toe on the ropes to force the break. Kaho goes up top but Hazuki grabs her from the apron, giving Kagetsu time to recover and dropkick to the floor. Takumi comes in but a double dropkick sends her right back out, Hazuki and Kagetsu go to do a dive but Takumi and Kaho interrupt them before they can finish it. Kaho gets in the ring and dives out on both opponents with a tope suicida, Kagetsu is slid back in the ring and Takumi slams her in front of the corner. Kaho goes for a corkscrew senton but Kagetsu moves out of the way and spits blue mist in her face. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu in front of the corner, she goes up top and nails the Oedo Coaster, but Takumi barely breaks up the cover. Hazuki takes care of her, Kagetsu picks Kaho up but Kaho slides away and applies the 120% Schoolboy, but Hazuki breaks it up. Kaho goes off the ropes but Hazuki hits her from the apron with the Oedo Tai Board, Death Valley Bomb by Kagetsu and she covers Kaho for the three count! Kagetsu and Hazuki win the match!

I’m not sure if it is because I am already nostalgic for Hazuki and Kagetsu, but this match in my opinion was pretty much flawless. I have literally nothing bad to say about it. Hazuki and Kagetsu work so well together as a team with the constant support and assistance you’d expect to see, while Takumi and Kaho did so a lot less which is completely logical since they aren’t a regular team. The action was so fast that I barely even had time to get a sip of water, in fear I’d miss something. Kaho took a beating but she is so good at that, and when she was on offense she was super crisp and smooth, which is impressive since she doesn’t regularly wrestle Hazuki or Kagetsu. I loved the ending, as Kaho got a real hope spot after the mist instead of just going right down, and it took something extra for Kagetsu to get the pin. Just about the perfect match within this style and incredibly fun to watch, I can’t imagine how it could have been any better.  Highly Recommended

CIMA and Jamie Hayter vs. Martina and Shigehiro Irie
CIMA and Jamie Hayter vs. Martina and Shigehiro Irie

I don’t even know what to think going into this. I don’t have much of a lead-in, its just a bizarre Natsu Sumire dream. Jamie Hayter and Martina are both in Oedo Tai but they are on opposite times to make things more fair, as they team with CIMA of STRONG HEARTS and the Freelancer Shigehiro Irie. That’s all I got, let’s see what this turns into.

CIMA and Martina start the match, but Martina is too much for CIMA to handle so he tags in Jamie. Jamie and Martina lock up, Jamie pushes Martina into the ropes and gives a clean break. They lock up again, Jamie gets Martina to the mat in a headlock but Martina struggles back to her feet. Waistlock by Jamie but Martina dances her way out of it, hard elbow by Jamie but she hurt Martina more than she intended and asks for forgiveness. Martina elbows her back instead and the two trade blows, Irish whip by Jamie to the corner but Martina boots her as she charges in. Release German by Martina and she hits a back elbow in the corner. Another elbow by Martina but Jamie avoids the next one, Martina kicks Jamie and hits a Backstabber out of the corner. Snapmare by Martina and she kicks Jamie in the back, but Jamie snapmares her in return and kicks her in the back as well. On their feet, they block each other’s kicks and both elbow each other before deciding they’ve had enough and tags in their partners. CIMA and Irie tie-up, CIMA pushes Irie into the ropes and gives a clean break. Irish whip by CIMA but Irie delivers a hard shoulderblock, Irie throws CIMA into the corner but CIMA avoids his charge and dropkicks Irie in the knee. Enzuigiri by CIMA but Irie catches him with a powerslam.

CIMA and Jamie Hayter vs. Martina and Shigehiro IrieIrie tags Martina, Martina goes to slam CIMA but CIMA blocks it. Irie comes over to help and with him she is able to hit the slam, body press by Irie to CIMA but CIMA moves when Martina goes for one. CIMA then hits a bulldog/dropkick combination on both opponents, she tags in Jamie and they both chop Martina in the chest. Lariat by Jamie to Martina and she hits a spinebuster before quickly applying a crab hold. Irie gives Martina a beer to help motivate her, and Martina makes it to the ropes for the break. Martina gets the advantage with a suplex and tags in Irie, Irie clubs Jamie in the back but Jamie fires back with elbows. Irie knocks Jamie to the mat, CIMA comes in to shield her but the referee gets him back to the apron. Irie throws Jamie into the corner and tags Martina, but Jamie elbows her as she charges in and suplexes her into the turnbuckles. Side slam onto her knee by Jamie, and she tags in CIMA while Martina also tags Irie. CIMA dropkicks Irie and knocks Martina off the apron, Irish whip by CIMA but Irie reverses it. CIMA kicks Irie before hitting a double knee in the corner, Martina runs in but CIMA scoop slams her. He then drop toeholds Irie onto Martina before hitting a splash, Jamie comes in and dives on top of the pile as well.

CIMA goes back to Irie, Irish whip by CIMA but Irie blocks it. Chop by CIMA but Irie catches him with a spinning side slam, giving him time to tag in Martina. Elbows by Martina but CIMA chops her back, tilt-a-whirl DDT by Martina into a vertical suplex and she covers CIMA for two. CIMA gets the advantage and tags Jamie, CIMA spanks Martina before leaving the ring so Jamie can take over. Martina dropkicks Jamie however and tags Irie, Irie gets Jamie on his shoulders but Jamie slides away. Lariat attempt by Jamie but Irie stays up, she goes for a suplex but Irie blocks it. Headbutt by Irie, he throws Jamie into the corner and delivers a running lariat. Cover by Irie, but Jamie gets a shoulder up. Irie goes off the ropes but Jamie kicks him, she lariats Irie but he stays on his feet. Scoop slam by Jamie and she hits a running senton, cover by Jamie but it gets a two count. Jamie picks up Irie but Irie snaps off a vertical suplex and tags Martina. Martina goes up top and hits a diving Codebreaker, cover by Martina but Jamie kicks out. Martina picks up Jamie and elbows her, Jamie goes off the ropes and knocks Martina over with a lariat. Jamie picks up Martina, Martina gets away but CIMA runs in and dropkicks her. Schwein by CIMA to Martina, Jamie lariats Martina in the back of the head and nails the Cow Killer for the three count! Jamie Hayter and CIMA are the winners!

This match had a similar mix of serious and playful as the first match, and while it didn’t hit as well with me it still wasn’t bad. Both of the male wrestlers seemed happy to take part in the playful bits but less excited to give the women much in the serious parts, and with the mixed genders the match had a lot of stop-and-go since the same genders seemed to prefer to be against each other. So some of the transitions weren’t great and it came across a bit clunky. The wrestlers themselves are all talented so when they got to it, the match was fun, but the structure was just all over the place. A unique match for sure which gives it some extra appeal, but a step down from the first two matches on the show.

Hazuki, Kagetsu, Natsuko Tora, and Natsu Sumire vs. Makoto, Rina Yamashita, Syuri, and Yuu
Hazuki, Kagetsu, Tora, and Sumire vs. Makoto, Yamashita, Syuri, and Yuu

While Oedo Tai is still an active faction today, to many more recent Stardom fans, this is the version they will best remember. This would be the last time these four ever teamed, and they have a hell of a team to go up against in their farewell. All four of their opponents are Freelancers, but they are four of the top Freelancers on the scene. All four have different origins – Makoto was trained in Ice Ribbon before becoming the Ace of REINA, Rina Yamashita started in WAVE, Syuri is a kickass MMA fighter, and Yuu was trained in Tokyo Joshi Pro. Its a really fun looking foursome, and add in some Oedo Tai shenanigans and this is a great looking main event.

Oedo Tai start the fight during the pre-match handshake, and the ring quickly clears with Syuri and Natsu alone in the ring. Natsu doesn’t see Syuri at first but eventually does, snapmare by Syuri and she kicks Natsu in the back. Kick to the chest by Syuri but Hazuki grabs her foot when she goes for a PK and pulls her out of the ring. Oedo Tai maintains the advantage on the floor while Natsu waits in the ring, Syuri is eventually rolled back in as Hazuki comes in as well. Natsuko and Kagetsu get in the ring as well and bring their opponents with them, Miyuki Takase and Aoki Itsuki are tossed in too as Jamie and Martina come in, and all six of Oedo Tai connect with running boots to one of their enemies. Rina is wrapped up in the ropes with a band wrapped near her mouth, Hazuki takes the other end of the band into the stands and snaps it back into Rina’s face. They put the band around her head again and this time Nao Yamaguchi takes it up into the crowd, but Natsuko accidentally lets go and snaps the band back into Nao. Martina checks on Nao while Natsu and Hazuki Irish whip Rina, with Hazuki hitting an assisted Codebreaker. Natsu puts Rina in the corner and delivers the gyrating Bronco Buster, but Rina picks her up and hits a powerbomb. Rina tags in Syuri, stomp by Syuri to Natsu and she snapmares her before connecting with a kick to the back. Syuri goes for a cross armbreaker but Natsu quickly gets out of it, she puts Natsu’s arm in the ropes and stomps down on it before tagging in Yuu. Yuu throws Natsu into the corner and hits a jumping elbow, senton by Yuu and she covers Natsu for two. Makoto is tagged in, she throws Natsu in the middle of the ring and goes up top, hitting a diving body press. Running double kneedrop by Makoto, and she covers Natsu for two.

Hazuki, Kagetsu, Tora, and Sumire vs. Makoto, Yamashita, Syuri, and YuuMakoto tags Rina, Rina comes in with a t-shirt and hits Natsu with it repeatedly. Giant Swing by Rina to Natsu while Syuri comes in to jump over her while she swings round and round before Rina drops Natsu to the mat. Natsu tries to tag out but crawls to the wrong corner due to her dizziness, while Rina tags in Makoto. Double underhook suplex attempt by Makoto but Natsu blocks it and elbows her, Natsuko hands Natsu her whip and she hits Makoto with it. She tries to hit Yuu but Yuu catches it, Natsu and Yuu talk for a bit, but Yuu knocks Natsu down with a lariat. Natsu knocks Yuu back and hits atomic drops on Syuri and Rina, Makoto runs in and she gets an atomic drop as well. This gives Natsu time to tag Hazuki, Hazuki rolls Makoto to the mat and chops her in the chest. Natsuko comes in and they both slam Makoto, they hit a double boot as well before Natsuko finally leaves. Hazuki picks up Makoto and the two trade elbows, pump kick by Hazuki but Makoto fires back with a boot of her own before hitting a double underhook suplex for two. Makoto tags in Yuu, hard shoulderblock by Yuu and Kagetsu and Natsu eat hard shoulderblocks as well. Natsuko comes in and Yuu can’t knock her over, they both charge at each other as they attempt to knock the other to the mat but neither can. Eye rake by Natsuko but Yuu drops her with a spinning side slam. Senton by Yuu, and she covers Natsuko for two. Yuu picks up Natsuko, chops by Yuu but Natsuko fires back with an elbow. They trade strikes until Yuu dropkicks Natsuko in the corner, Cannonball by Yuu and she covers Natsuko for two. Yuu gets on the second turnbuckle but Natsuko recovers and tosses her off, spear by Natsuko but Yuu tosses her to the mat when she charges in. Both wrestlers tags out as Kagetsu and Syuri become the legal wrestlers, they trade kicks to the chest until Syuri knocks Kagetsu to the mat. Cover by Syuri, but it gets two. Syuri quickly goes for the cross armbreaker while her team protects her, but Kagetsu rolls out of it and delivers a strike combination. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu, but Syuri kicks out of the pin attempt.

Kagetsu picks up Syuri but Syuri snaps off a German suplex, Kagetsu returns to her feet and hits a head kick but Syuri returns the favor and both wrestlers are down on the mat. Syuri tags in Rina while Kagetsu tags in Natsu, Natsu goes for a knee but Rina blocks it and drives her into the corner. Lariats by Rina and she knees Natsu in the back, cover by Rina but it gets two. Rina picks up Natsu but Natsu elbows her and the two trade strikes. Hazuki, Natsu, and Kagetsu all run in as Rina is attacked by all four, Nao Yamaguchi gets in the ring too and she lariats Rina. Natsu suplexes Rina but the cover is broken up, Syuri grabs Natsu from behind and hits a Backstabber with Yuu following with a body press. Cartwheel double kneedrop by Makoto to Natsu, Rina goes off the ropes and hits a lariat but Natsuko grabs the referee to break up the cover. Rina goes off the ropes again but Natsu catches her with an inside cradle for two. Rina picks up Natsu but Jamie Hayter hits her in the head with the Oedo Tai board, big boot by Natsu to Rina but Yuu breaks up the cover with a senton. Hazuki pump kicks Yuu, Makoto then boots Hazuki but Kagetsu kicks Makoto out of the ring. Syuri takes care of Kagetsu and then kicks Natsuko in the head for good measure, leaving bodies everywhere. Rina and Natsu slowly recover and trade elbows, Natsu boots Rina while Rina returns fire with lariats. Rina finally knocks Natsuko off her feet with a lariat, she picks her up and kicks Natsu in the head. Another lariat by Rina, but Natsu barely kicks out of the cover. Rina picks up Natsu and goes for the Splash Mountain, she nails it but the rest of Oedo Tai break up the cover. Rina drags Natsu to her feet and goes for it again, but Martina spits water in her face. Spear by Natsuko to Rina, she falls out of the ring and Kagetsu and Hazuki dive out onto their opponents with stereo tope suicidas. Rina is rolled back in and Kagetsu hits her with an Ebisu Drop, then Natsuko goes up top and hits a guillotine legdrop on Rina. Hazuki follows with a diving senton, Natsu picks up Rina and nails the Demon for the three count! Oedo Tai are the winners!

While the number of wrestlers and different styles may have prevented the match from really getting into a good rhythm, its hard not to enjoy the final match with this version of Oedo Tai. There were some stretches where it felt like nothing was happening but they sprinkled in memorable and fun spots throughout to keep things interesting, whether it was Syuri playing jump rope over Natsu’s body or Yuu and Natsuko having their stand-off. The other Oedo Tai members getting in on the action felt appropriate and it was nice to see Nao Yamaguchi getting involved as well. With eight wrestlers in the match, none really got a chance to stand out but everyone did get their big moves in, and none looked out of place in this chaotic environment. A fun match and a fitting main event for Natsu Sumire’s show, it wouldn’t win any MOTY awards but delivered what they were going for.  Recommended

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JTO GIRLS 2 on 2/18/20 Review https://joshicity.com/jto-girls-2-february-18-2020-review/ Thu, 12 Mar 2020 04:26:57 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=15947 Kagetsu goes up against Maika!

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JTO GIRLS 2 Poster

Event: JUST TAP OUT GIRLS 2
Date: February 18th, 2020
Location: Ice Ribbon Dojo in Saitama, Japan
Announced Attendance: 104

While this is a very small show, I didn’t want to miss it for a few different reasons. First, I always enjoy seeing new wrestlers and I haven’t seen a lot of Tomoka Inaba or Maika yet since both are still in the first year of their careers. Second, I dunno who Black Changita is but I am intrigued. And finally, with Kagetsu retiring I want to see as many of her matches on her final tour to different promotions as I possibly can. Plus we have an Andras Miyagi appearance as well. Here is the full card:

As this aired on NicoPro, all matches will be shown in full. All the wrestlers on the show have profiles on Joshi City except for Black Changita, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

Tomoka Inaba vs. Black Changita
Black Changita vs. Tomoka Inaba

We start the show with the mysterious Black Changita against the rookie Tomoko Inaba. Black Changita is part of a faction called Just Knock Out (jKo), which is group of five wrestlers invading JUST TAP OUT. They all wear masks and are mysterious, I haven’t had any luck figuring out if they are from a different promotion, new wrestlers, or what their story is. Black Changita is against Tomoka, who is 17 years old and debuted in July of 2019. She isn’t JTO’s top rookie, that prize goes to Maika, but if she can look good against Black Changita it will do a lot to improve her standing in the promotion.

Black Changita vs. Tomoka Inaba

Black Changita immediately catches Tomoka with a strike combination, punch to the gut by Black Changita and Tomoka crumbles to the mat. Black Changita picks up Tomoka and hits more punches, knees by Black Changita and she hits a running knee for a two count. Black Changita applies an armtrap crossface but Tomoka quickly gets to the ropes to force the break. Black Changita kicks Tomoka into the corner and stomps on her, she stands up Tomoka and kicks her some more. She charges at Tomoka but Tomoka moves and boots her in the face, leg kick by Black Changita and Black Changita bails out of the ring to re-group. She eventually returns but Tomoka knees her as she gets on the apron, Black Changita punches her in the midsection and connects with a series of kicks.

Head kick by Black Changita, she covers Tomoka but Tomoka barely kicks out. Black Changita applies the armtrap crossface again, but Tomoka gets a hand on the ropes. Black Changita waits for Tomoka to get up but Tomoka blocks her kick and hits a kick of her own, high kick by Tomoka and she kicks Black Changita in the back. She goes for a PK but Black Changita ducks it and applies a Cobra Twist. Tomoka gets to the ropes again, Black Changita picks her up but Tomoka delivers a quick head kick. Tomoka sits up Black Changita and hits a PK, cover by Tomoka but it gets a two count. Tomoka applies a knee lock but Black Changita muscles into better position and holds down Tomoka for the three count! Black Changita is the winner.

What an odd little match. For the bulk of it, Black Changita was attempting to assert her will with strikes, some looking good but most not so much. Then she wins with basically a submission cutback, which is fine in most cases but she went from dominating heel to winning almost by fluke in a span of five minutes. Tomoka looked ok I guess but she still has a lot of room for growth. Not a good match, or a particularly interesting one, would have preferred Black Changita just dominate Tomoka and pick up the win with a strike to make it a more memorable victory.

Aki Shizuku vs. Andras Miyagi
Aki Shizuku vs. Andras Miyagi

Next we have the battle of the Freelancers, as Aki Shizuku takes on Andras Miyagi. Andras has had a really weird past 12 months. She was one of the brighter young stars in Sendai Girls’, with multiple title reigns under her belt. She left and joined Stardom, and at first saw some success, but by the Fall she was an afterthought. After looking disengaged in Stardom to end 2019, she suddenly left the promotion and was removed from their roster page in 2020. Since then she has been appearing in JTO, still in a heel character as she blames Maika for her losing her spot as Giulia’s partner in her new Stardom faction. Whether this is all part of a bigger storyline or not isn’t known yet, but her career appears to have taken a turn for the worse. She is against Aki Shizuku, who has been a lower level Freelancer for most of her career and has spent the last couple in K-DOJO and then JTO. This should be an easy win for Andras, but will she care enough to actually make the match good?

Aki Shizuku vs. Andras MiyagiThey are slow to engage with Andras in particular being in no rush to get things started, so Aki attacks her from behind. Andras exits the ring and walks around the crowd, she eventually returns but Aki exits the ring as she does as they play mind games. Aki gets back in the ring but Andras exits it again. Aki finally gets tired of this and goes out to get Andras, she brings her back into the ring and clubs on her back. Aki goes for a shoulderblock but Andras stays up, Andras tries as well but has the same result. Finally Aki shoulderblocks Andras over, elbow drops by Aki and she puts Andras in a stretch hold. She lets go after a moment but Andras gets her to the mat and applies a modified armbar with a headscissors. She lets go and stomps on Aki, snapmare by Andras and she applies a headlock. She only lets go so she can complain to the referee, about what I am not sure, before going back to Aki and choking her with her boot. Aki tries to fight back but Andras clubs her and puts Aki in a chinlock. Andras kicks Aki in the back of the head and tries to throw her into the corner, Aki reverses it but Andras gets her from the back.

DDT by Andras and she kicks Aki out of the ring, she goes out after her and goes for the piledriver, but Aki blocks it. Andras charges Aki but Aki moves and hits the ring post by accident, lariat by Aki and she gets back into the ring. Andras slowly returns as well, lariat by Aki but Andras blocks the fisherman buster. Spear by Aki, she waits for Andras to get up and hits a lariat in the corner. Fisherman buster by Aki, and she covers Andras for two. Aki picks up Andras but Andras slides away, she uses the referee as a shield before dropping Aki with a tombstone piledriver. Cover by Andras, but the referee won’t count due to the Shield Incident. Andras gets a chair slid to her by Black Changita and hits the referee with it, she then hits Aki in the head with the chair before hitting a tombstone piledriver on it. The referee has seen enough after that, and DQs Andras. Your winner is Aki Shizuku!

Well that was a match. I know a popular heel shtick is to waste time, thus making the crowd hate you, but its 2020 and I am over that method of getting boos. I want to watch two people wrestle, not someone kill five minutes. And the payoff wasn’t really worth it anyway as they went straight into introductory trading of holds instead of anything interesting. Then they traded long submissions, all to get to the point which was Andras not caring about the rules and getting herself DQed. I have no issue with the ending, it puts over Andras as being a loose cannon, but the path to get there with the long submission holds and meandering action wasn’t worth it. Have her do that five minutes into the match, not after applying a two minute chinlock. Just a poorly structured match and I continue to be concerned about the immediate future of Andras Miyagi.

Kagetsu vs. Maika
Kagetsu vs. Maika

For the main event, Kagetsu has one of the last matches of her career against JTO rookie Maika. Kagetsu wrestling against Maika may seem random since they have no history at all, but Maika started wrestling in Stardom as well in January so its not totally out of left field. Maika debuted last Spring and even though she has only had about 20 matches, she has had some success as she is pushed as the top female wrestler in JUST TAP OUT. Still, she obviously has an uphill battle against Kagetsu as even though she is JTO’s Super Rookie, she still ranks well below the former Oedo Tai leader. Since this is the main event (of a small show), hopefully they do more than just have your typical veteran/rookie match, Kagetsu is generally pretty giving so ideally Maika will get a bit of a chance to shine here before losing.

They circle each other to start before locking up, armdrag by Maika and she applies a headlock. Kagetsu reverses it into a headscissors but Maika gets out of that and goes back to the headlock. Kagetsu reverses it but Maika gets into the ropes, forcing the break. Back up, kicks to the chest by Kagetsu and she snapmares Maika before applying a chinlock. She lets go and tosses Maika out of the ring, she takes Maika up into the crowd and throws her into a row of chairs. Kagetsu buries Maika under a bunch of chairs, giving no one a place to sit down, before taking Maika back to ringside and into the ring. Kagetsu gets on the apron and hits a swandive missile dropkick, she taunts Maika and throws her into the corner, hitting a jumping elbow. Running single leg kick by Kagetsu, she snapmares Maika and covers her for two. Kagetsu applies a submission hold but Maika gets into the ropes, Kagetsu gets a bottle of water and takes a drink before spitting some into Maika’s face. Kagetsu goes off the ropes but Maika catches her with a toss and applies a cross armbreaker. Kagetsu inches to the ropes and quickly makes it to get the break, Maika stomps on Kagetsu’s arm in the corner before delivering a running kick to it. Fujiwara Armbar by Maika which she switches to an armlock, but Kagetsu gets to the ropes again.

Kagetsu vs. MaikaBack up, strike combination by Kagetsu and she hits a vertical suplex, cover by Kagetsu but Maika kicks out. Kagetsu picks up Maika and hits a Samoan Drop, but that gets a two count as well. Kagetsu goes off the ropes and hits a running knee, cover by Kagetsu but Maika gets a shoulder up. Kagetsu picks up Maika but Maika slides away and goes back to the cross armbreaker. She reverts it to a Triangle Choke attempt and she gets it locked on, but Kagetsu manages to stand up and get out of the hold. Maika goes for the STO but Kagetsu blocks it, elbow by Kagetsu but Maika elbows her back and the two trade strikes. Maika pulls down Kagetsu by the hair and armdrags her around the ring, monkey flip by Maika and she hits the STO. Cover by Maika, but it gets a two count. Maika picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu knees her in the midsection, Kagetsu charges Maika but Maika slams her to the mat. Kagetsu tosses Maika into the corner towards the referee but the referee moves to avoid the collision, Kagetsu tries again but this time hits the referee. He doesn’t go down though and is staring at Kagetsu when she spits red mist into Maika’s face (I guess he didn’t get the memo), Kagetsu slams Maika in front of the corner and nails the Oedo Coaster for the three count! Kagetsu is your winner!

Even though it may not have been a main-event quality match, this was still pretty solid. As I figured, Kagetsu gave the rookie quite a bit of offense and it was far from one-sided, with Maika having several opportunities to win and Kagetsu selling for her offense pretty hard. The match started slow, for a short-ish match I think the “outside the ring” brawling could have been reduced some, but once they got back into the ring it stayed pretty engaging the rest of the match. The funniest part was the referee either not knowing the spot or not knowing he was supposed to look away when Kagetsu did the mist as he was not only looking at her but reacted to it. Its a *wink wink* thing since obviously the referee will always see the mist everywhere afterwards, but in theory its an illegal move so they should be looking in a different direction when the move is done. Anyway, a little clunky at times but overall a fun match, Maika still has a ways to go but the foundation is there to be a great wrestler down the road.  Mildly Recommended

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Kagetsu Retirement Show ~ Many Face on 2/24/20 Review https://joshicity.com/kagetsu-retirement-show-many-face-february-24-2020-review/ Sat, 07 Mar 2020 19:00:56 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=15870 Kagetsu has her retirement match vs. Meiko Satomura!

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Kagetsu Retirement Show Poster

Event: Kagetsu Retirement Show ~ Many Face
Date: February 24th, 2020
Location: EDION Arena Osaka #2 in Osaka, Japan
Announced Attendance: 733

As is always the case in the world of Joshi, the retirement hits never stop coming. This one is harder to swallow than most as Kagetsu not only is a fantastic wrestler and trainer but is still (at least in the eyes of fans) in her prime. But Kagetsu had a pretty lengthy career for a Joshi wrestler (twelve years) and has openly considered retiring in the past, and at least she is going out on her own terms as she booked her own retirement show. As tends to be the case with wrestler-produced events we will see a fun variety of wrestlers on the show, ending with Kagetsu battling her trainer Meiko Satomura for the first time since 2014 in her final match. I’ll be reviewing the Joshi matches on the event, here is the match line-up:

All wrestlers on the show have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it. Even though we are watching the TV airing of the event I am assuming there will not be any clipping, but if there is I will point it out as we go along.


Leyla Hirsch, Syuri, and Yuu vs. Natsuko Tora and Sumire

We start with… a handicap match! Kagetsu stacks the deck against her Oedo Tai friends to begin the event, but Oedo Tai has some backup support in the recently retired Hazuki so I am sure they will not have any issues. The three person team is certainly a unique one as they don’t normally team together, with the gaijin Leyla Hirsch joining the Freelancers Syuri and Yuu in battle. Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire are representing Stardom and are the highest ranking native wrestlers in the current Oedo Tai. A unique way to kick off the show, but anything goes on wrestler-produced events.

Natsu Sumire talked on the mic as the match was starting until Syuri and friends got tired of listening to her and all attack her. Natsuko tries to help but gets tossed out of the ring, Yuu stays in the ring with Natsu and goes off the ropes, but she is tripped from ringside and pulled out to the floor. Oedo Tai takes over, with Hazuki helping to even the numbers, as they fight on the floor and into the crowd. Hazuki throws Yuu back into the ring, Natsu joins her and sets up Yuu in the ropes. Natsuko puts the big rubber band around Yuu’s head, Natsu takes the other end and runs up into the crowd before snapping it back into Yuu’s face. Natsuko punches Yuu and puts her in the ropes again, this time Hazuki grabs the other end of the band and snaps it into Yuu. No idea where Syuri and Leyla ran off to. Natsu throws Yuu into the corner and knocks her down into a seated position, she charges in and delivers her gyrating bronco buster. Natsu tags in Natsuko but Yuu chops her and the two trade blows. Natsuko goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a sidewalk slam, running senton by Yuu and she covers Natsuko for two.

Natsuko Tora & Natsu Sumire vs. Leyla Hirsch, Syuri & YuuYuu positions Natsuko near the corner and goes up top, but Natsuko recovers and gets Yuu on her shoulders. Yuu slides away and goes off the ropes, Natsuko goes for a Samoan Drop but she accidentally drops her. Headbutt by Natsuko, she manages to pick up Yuu this time and hits the Samoan Drop. Natsuko goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a toss and finally makes the tag to Syuri. Syuri kicks Natsuko repeatedly in the chest, running knee by Syuri and she hits a double underhook suplex for a two count. Cross armbreaker by Syuri and she switches it to a seated armbar, but Natsu breaks it up. More kicks by Syuri, she goes off the ropes but Hazuki hits Syuri from ringside. Syuri kicks Natsuko in the head anyway but Natsuko comes back with a spear, and both wrestlers are down on the mat. They crawl to their corners as Leyla and Natsu are tagged in, knee by Natsu and she boots Leyla in the head. Running boot by Natsu but Leyla elbows her back, Irish whip by Natsu but Leyla flips her to the mat and hits a running knee. Olympic Slam by Leyla, but Natsu kicks out of the cover.

Leyla goes for the Triangle Moonsault but Natsu moves out of the way and stomps on her head. Leyla kicks Natsu and tosses her to the  mat, giving her time to tag Yuu. Yuu chops Natsu in the chest but Natsu avoids the running senton and whips Yuu. Irish whip by Natsu from the corner but Yuu reverses it, Natsu avoids Yuu’s charge and both Hazuki and Natsuko run in the ring as Yuu is triple teamed. Diving crossbody by Natsu, but it only gets two. Natsu picks up Yuu but Leyla and Syuri both run in to help, Natsu takes care of both of them and picks up Yuu, hitting a double arm DDT. Somato by Natsu, but Yuu gets a hand on the ropes to break up the cover. Yuu dropkicks Natsu into the corner, Syuri comes in and delivers a running knee. Cannonball by Yuu, they pull Natsu out of the corner so that Leyla can hit the Triangle Moonsault. Cover by Yuu, but Natsuko breaks it up. Yuu picks up Natsu and nails a powerbomb, cover by Yuu and she gets the three count! Yuu, Syuri, and Leyla Hirsch are the winners.

The only good thing about this match was seeing Hazuki again, love her and she seemed to be having so much fun. Everything else was rough though. Natsuko’s lack of chemistry with Yuu was clear and distracting, with several spots not looking right. Syuri did virtually nothing and wasn’t needed in the match, matches having extra wrestlers just for the sake of it will always be a pet peeve of mine. Wrestlers disappeared for long stretches and for a short match it took awhile to get going. So a very skippable opener, with the lone reason to watch being Hazuki, who obviously wasn’t even in the match.

AZM vs. Kaho Kobayashi vs. Mei Suruga
AZM vs. Kaho Kobayashi vs. Mei Suruga

Mei Suruga pops up a lot in retirement/farewell/etc. type events and I love it, as it shows that veteran wrestlers see her potential. This is a classic “wrestler produce” match, with three seemingly random wrestlers thrown together. AZM of course is Kagetsu’s friend and former teammate in Stardom, she faces off against popular Freelancer Kaho Kobayashi and Mei Suruga, a young wrestler from Gatoh Move. The match isn’t technically under “High Speed” rules but I imagine the match will still go in that direction.

AZM is slow to shake Mei’s hand before the match but finally does so, Mei and AZM both try to get the crowd’s support while Kaho looks on. All three engage in a double headlock before going into a fast paced exchange, AZM and Mei force Kaho to run the ropes until she collapses on the mat. AZM covers her but Mei breaks it up, Mei and AZM get into it until they all miss a dropkick and face off again. Kaho collapses due to still being tired from running the ropes but recovers as AZM is double teamed. Mei rolls AZM round the mat before posing as she pins AZM down, Kaho poses next to Mei but AZM kicks out. Mei tells Kaho to go on the top turnbuckle so she does, but Mei rolls up AZM real quick for a two count. She tries a few more times before Kaho jumps down and kicks her, Irish whip by Kaho and both she and AZM dropkick Mei. Double Irish whip to Mei to the corner and they take turns dropkicking her, with AZM encouraging Kaho to dropkick her more. Senton by Kaho to Mei and AZM kicks Mei in the back, AZM puts Mei in a camel clutch and Kaho bounces off the ropes a bunch of times before dropkicking Mei. They switch places with Kaho holding Mei for AZM, AZM goes off the ropes but she kicks Kaho instead. Dropkick by AZM to Kaho, she goes to Mei but Mei grabs her wrist and jumps off the ropes before hitting an armdrag.

Kaho Kobayashi vs. AZM vs. Mei SurugaMei charges AZM but AZM boots her back, Mei catches her next boot and rakes her face until the referee gets her to stop. Mei tosses the referee to the mat and catapults off his back with a dropkick, cover by Mei but AZM kicks out. Back up, AZM hits a suplex followed by a head kick, cover by AZM but Kaho breaks it up. Irish whip by Kaho but AZM hits a tilt-a-whirl headscissors into an armbar. Kaho rolls out of it but AZM kicks her in the head, she goes up top and nails the diving footstomp but Kaho barely kicks out of the cover. Fujiwara Armbar by AZM but Kaho gets into the ropes for the break, AZM picks up Kaho but Kaho schoolboys her for two. AZM elbows Kaho but Kaho elbows her back as they trade shots, Kaho kicks AZM in the shin and delivers a DDT. Step-up kick by Kaho, she covers AZM but it gets two. Kaho goes to the top turnbuckle but Mei reemerges and schoolboys AZM for two. Kaho comes off the top turnbuckle with a missile dropkick to Mei, she then dropkicks AZM and AZM falls out of the ring. Kaho goes for a tope suicida but AZM and Mei both move, so she splats head-first into the floor. AZM and Mei return to the ring, they trade flash pins but neither can get the three count. Head kick by AZM, she knocks Kaho off the apron but Mei cradles AZM for two. They trade quick covers again until AZM puts Mei in the Azumi Sushi and picks up the three count! AZM is the winner.

This type of comedy wrestling, or a wrestling match with comedy elements, is the type that hits better with me. It was playful throughout but when it got down to it they all were trying to win, all three wrestlers have ‘flash’ style methods of pinning their opponent so everything going on fit within their characters. Kaho being the ‘old’ one they tried to tire out was a fun touch and anytime I get to see Mei I don’t complain. An easy watch and entertaining match. Mildly Recommended

Saya Iida vs. Kagetsu
Saya Iida vs. Kagetsu

Saya Iida’s mystery opponent is…. Kagetsu! To be honest everyone had already figured this out but it is still a nice way for Kagetsu to give one of her young former trainees a chance in the spotlight. This may seem like an unusual match to have as one of Kagetsu’s last ones as they could have done this on a different show previously, but Kagetsu wanted to highlight one of her students on the way out so no one is really going to complain. This won’t be a high end match but still could be an entertaining one, past and present members of Oedo Tai are at ringside (Nao Yamaguchi, Natsu Sumire, Natsuko Tora, and Hazuki) so expect them to get involved at some point as well.

Kagetsu vs. Saya IidaKagetsu won’t shake Saya’s hand before the match but as soon as the bell rings, Saya charges her and dropkicks Kagetsu into the corner. More dropkicks by Saya but Kagetsu doesn’t fall to the mat, finally Saya dropkicks her in the knee and again in the chest to knock her over. Saya picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu blocks the scoop slam, chops by Saya but Kagetsu ducks one and rakes her in the eyes. Kagetsu goes off the ropes but Saya chops her to the mat, she picks up Kagetsu and delivers a scoop slam for a two count. Saya goes up top and hits a missile dropkick, she goes to the top turnbuckle again and hits a second one. A third time she goes up and delivers a third missile dropkick which she follows with a fourth one for a two count cover. With Kagetsu down, Saya goes to the top turnbuckle but Natsuko and Natsu grab her from the apron. They let go after a moment, Saya goes for a missile dropkick but Kagetsu moves out of the way and throws Saya out of the ring. Natsuko finds a weapon (Utami) and throws her at Saya before sliding Saya back into the ring, vertical suplex by Kagetsu and she covers Saya for two. Kagetsu picks up Saya and hits a Samoan Drop, but again Saya kicks out of the pin. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu, but Saya barely gets a shoulder up. Kagetsu picks up Saya but Saya slides away and cradles her for two. Iida Bridge by Saya, but Kagetsu kicks out of that as well. Saya goes off the ropes but Kagetsu catches her with a cross armbreaker takedown. Kagetsu switches the hold to an arm lock and Saya has no choice but to submit! Kagetsu is the winner.

Its important to remember that a wrestler’s retirement show is for them, not for us. They let us watch, but each match the retiring wrestler is in is one that personally makes them happy or satisfied, they aren’t necessarily concerned with putting on high end matches. This match is what you would expect in an opener between a trainer and a student. Saya got in some hope spots so that it wasn’t a squash, but Kagetsu pretty thoroughly beat her down and won with a random submission hold that isn’t even one of her finishers. A pretty emotional match for Saya and one that likely meant a lot to Kagetsu (even if she didn’t show it), but a pretty average match in the grand scheme of things through the eyes of a viewer.

Kagetsu vs. Meiko Satomura
Kagetsu vs. Meiko Satomura

And finally, we have reached the final match of Kagetsu’s career. I mentioned in the review for the last match that a wrestler’s final matches are ones that make them happy, not necessarily make us happy. This is the rare match that fits both criteria, as clearly it means a lot to Kagetsu but the chances are pretty good that this will be a really great match. Kagetsu was trained by Meiko Satomura in Sendai Girls’ and that was her home promotion for the first seven years of her career. Kagetsu eventually left, becoming a Freelancer in 2014 before eventually joining Stardom in 2017. In carving her own path, Kagetsu put Sendai Girls’ behind her as this is her first match against her former trainer since they had a singles match in 2014. Kagetsu has never defeated Satomura in a singles match but she gets one more shot here in the final match of her career.

Kagetsu is in her “traditional” wrestling attire for this match, going back to her roots for her final match. Satomura pushes Kagetsu into the ropes to start and kicks her in the leg instead of giving a clean break, they end up on the mat but roll into the ropes. Back on their feet they lock knuckles, Satomura gets Kagetsu to the mat again and puts her in a side headlock. Kagetsu returns to her feet and gets out of the hold, she tries to shoulderblock Satomura over but Satomura stays on her feet. A dropkick does the trick, Kagetsu picks Satomura up and hits a side headlock takedown, keeping the hold applied on the mat. Satomura quickly reverses it into a headscissors but Kagetsu reverses it back as they trade submissions. Satomura gets the advantage and kicks Kagetsu, uppercut by Satomura and she elbows Kagetsu into the corner. Wristlock by Satomura and she kicks Kagetsu repeatedly in the chest, double kneedrop by Satomura and she covers Kagetsu for two. Satomura goes up top but Kagetsu springboards up and kicks her down to the floor, Kagetsu goes off the ropes and hits a tope suicida. She quickly gets back in the ring and she hits a second tope suicida followed by a third. Kagetsu throws Satomura into the chairs at ringside, she takes her into the crowd and chokes her with a chair. Kagetsu slides Satomura back in the ring and hits a swandive missile dropkick, she puts Satomura in a submission hold but Satomura gets into the ropes for the break.

Meiko Satomura vs. KagetsuKagetsu elbows Satomura into the corner, Irish whip by Kagetsu and she hits a jumping elbow smash. Running boot to the face by Kagetsu, she picks up Satomura and spits water in her face. Satomura doesn’t like that and slaps her, dropkick by Kagetsu but Satomura delivers a heel kick. Satomura goes for a backdrop suplex but Kagetsu lands on her feet and hits a pair of kicks. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu, and she covers Satomura for two. Kagetsu gets Satomura on her shoulders and hits another Ebisu Drop, she goes to the top turnbuckle but Satomura recovers and joins her. Superplex by Satomura but Kagetsu returns to her feet and nails a sliding knee, so both wrestlers are down on the mat. They slowly get up, Kagetsu goes for a cross armbreaker and gets it applied, but Satomura rolls out of it. Kagetsu switches it to an armlock but Satomura gets a foot on the ropes for the break. Snapmare by Kagetsu, she goes up top but Satomura nails her with a Pele Kick. Back in the middle of the ring, kicks to the chest by Satomura and she hits a backdrop suplex for a two count. Satomura goes for another one but Kagetsu elbows out of it, kicks by Satomura and she drives Kagetsu into the corner. Satomura goes up top and hits a diving body press, but Kagetsu gets out of the cover. Sleeper hold by Satomura, but Kagetsu gets to the ropes.

Satomura kicks Kagetsu before picking her up and goes for a Death Valley Bomb, but Kagetsu gets out of it and spits blue mist in her face. Death Valley Bomb by Kagetsu but Satomura gets back up and  and hits a backdrop suplex. Kagetsu quickly returns to her feet as well and the two trade elbows, high kick by Satomura but Kagetsu kips up and hits her own head kick. Death Valley Bomb by Kagetsu but Satomura avoids the Buzzsaw Kick and hits a leg sweep. Head kick by Satomura and she hits a Death Valley Bomb, cover by Satomura but Kagetsu barely kicks out. Satomura hits a second one, but again Kagetsu kicks out of the cover. Cartwheel kneedrop by Satomura, she picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu pushes the referee down and spits mist in her face again. Ebisu Drop in front of the corner by Kagetsu, she goes up top and nails the Oedo Coaster before hitting a Death Valley Bomb. Kagetsu picks Satomura back up and hits a second Death Valley Bomb before hitting a third. Cover by Kagetsu, but Satomura manages to get a shoulder up. Kagetsu goes to pick up Satomura but Satomura kicks her off, they trade strikes until Satomura hits a Pele Kick. Head kick by Satomura and she hits a Death Valley Bomb, but the cover gets two. Scorpio Rising by Satomura, and she covers Kagetsu for the three count! Meiko Satomura is your winner.

If you enjoy excess in wrestling, this is the match for you. Under normal circumstances I wouldn’t be a big fan of them spamming their finishing moves, but this being simultaneously a retirement match and a trainer/student match I am willing to let it slide. Kagetsu slipping back into her Oedo Tai roots when her normal tricks weren’t working was a nice touch and showed her progression since she left Satomura’s tutelage, but in the end it didn’t matter as she still couldn’t take down her former master. Satomura was also smart enough to still end the match with a different finisher then one they were doing over and over earlier in the match. As you’d expect, the strikes were all on-point as Satomura legitimately hasn’t lost a step, and both were going all-out for Kagetsu’s final match. In any situation I’d probably love this match, but with the backstory and everything else involved it was an emotional and perfect ending to Kagetsu’s successful career.  Highly Recommended 

Kagetsu Retirement

After the final match, they had the retirement ceremony for Kagetsu. Different wrestlers came down to give her a gift and say farewell, including Queen’s Quest, Jinsei Shinzaki, Meiko Satomura, and of course Hazuki. Then the bell tolled, the streamers were thrown, and Kagetsu was carried out of the wrestling ring for the last time.

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Stardom 9th Anniversary on 1/19/20 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-9th-anniversary-january-19-2020-review/ Fri, 07 Feb 2020 08:55:23 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=15443 Featuring Mayu Iwatani vs. Momo Watanabe!

The post Stardom 9th Anniversary on 1/19/20 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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Stardom 9th Anniversary Poster

Event: Stardom 9th Anniversary
Date: January 19th, 2020
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 1,602

The Bushiroad Era has officially begun. Bushiroad purchased Stardom in the fall of 2019 but since they are doing a gradual transition, this event feels like the first one Bushiroad really had a major hand in, especially after Stardom wrestlers had a match at the Tokyo Dome a few weeks prior for added publicity. So this feels like the real start, and what a start it is. With the help of extra marketing and buzz, tonight’s attendance at Korakuen Hall is the most in recent memory for Stardom, with additional seats being opened up before the show. Its a stacked event, with three title matches and a special singles match between Kagetsu and Tam Nakano. Here is the full card:

A lot of potential for goodness. I am watching the Samurai TV! version of the show so some matches may be clipped. All wrestlers have profiles on the site, you can click on their names above to go straight to it.

Zoey Skye vs. AZM vs. Starlight Kid
AZM vs. Starlight Kid vs. Zoey Skye

While three way matches aren’t my cup of tea, any match with Starlight Kid in it I am going to be excited about. AZM and Starlight Kid will probably end up being generational rivals if they both stick to wrestling as their age and size are very similar, they have already developed a great chemistry together. Zoey being thrown in isn’t really necessary but they already paid to have her in Japan so it makes sense to not leave her off a major card. The winner in these matches never matters but hopefully they have some fun spots planned.

Zoey Skye vs. AZM vs. Starlight KidAfter a quick test of strength they get into it, Starlight Kid is isolated first as AZM and Zoey work together. That is short-lived as Starlight Kid fights them off, double dropkick by Starlight Kid and she hits a Tiger Feint Kick on AZM. Standing moonsault by Starlight Kid, and she covers AZM for two. Starlight Kid picks up AZM and they have a strike exchange, AZM headscissors Starlight Kid into the turnbuckles before hitting a dropkick. Zoey gets on the apron and kicks AZM, she gets back in the ring and throws both opponents in opposite corners, hitting running strikes on both. Jawbreaker by Zoey to AZM, and she covers her for two. Zoey goes to the second turnbuckle but Starlight Kid recovers and joins her, AZM jumps up as well but Zoey pushes them both into a hanging position and hits a double footstomp on both of them for a two count cover. AZM and Starlight Kid go off the ropes, dropkick by Starlight Kid to Zoey and she avoid AZM’s sneak attack PK. Vertical suplex by AZM and she kicks Starlight Kid in the head, she goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving footstomp but Zoey breaks up the cover. Zoey grabs Starlight Kid and kicks her in the head, she goes off the ropes but AZM hits a tilt-a-whirl armbar into a cradle for the three count! AZM wins the match.

This was clipped but what they showed was fine. Starlight Kid was the star as she tends to be in her matches but no one looked out of place and they kept the action going at a quick pace. An enjoyable enough way to kick off the show, just not enough time given to get excited about.

Oedo Tai vs. Itsuki Hoshino, Saya Iida & Saya Kamitani
Itsuki Hoshino, Saya Iida, and Kamitani vs. Natsuko Tora, Sumire, and Kashima

Itsuki Hoshino, Saya Iida & Saya Kamitani vs. Oedo TaiThe rookies battle the new Oedo Tai! This is really set up as a way to give Oedo Tai the spotlight, with the latest member Saki Kashima getting a chance to shine as they go up against young wrestlers with no chance of winning. I suspect that Iida and Kamitani will get in some hope spots but the story here will be about Oedo Tai asserting their authority.

We join his one in progress, as Saki swats away Iida’s dropkick attempt. Stomps by Saki but Iida catches one and hulks up, chopping Saki in the chest repeatedly. Saki grabs Iida by the hair and flings her to the mat, Itsuki and Kamitani run in and dropkick Saki before Iida delivers a missile dropkick for two. Iida Bridge by Iida, but Saki kicks out at two. Natsuko comes in and spears both Kamitani and Itsuki, Natsu hits Iida with the board Saki boots her in the face. My Emblem by Saki, and she picks up the three count! Oedo Tai are the winners.

Well this was all clipped to hell, with eleven minutes taken down to two. Hard to really comment much with so little shown, but Saki Kashima was highlighted as expected. Not much to see here though, literally.

Kagetsu vs. Tam Nakano
Kagetsu vs. Tam Nakano

As Kagetsu’s Stardom farewell tour comes close to an end, she faces off against her friend turned enemy Tam Nakano. When Tam Nakano first joined Stardom in 2017, she was in Oedo Tai with Kagetsu, however she was not in the group for long as after losing in a gauntlet match in early 2018 she was forced to leave. In opposing groups since, Kagetsu and Tam have faced off many times but this is only their third singles match, with the last two both coming in tournaments. This match is sure to be a fun one as Tam has improved so much in the last year and Kagetsu is hell bent on going out with a bang.

They tie-up to start, armdrag by Kagetsu but Tam rolls away as they jockey for position on the mat. They reach a stalemate and return to their feet, kick by Kagetsu and she hits an armdrag. Tam returns the favor and Kagetsu rolls out of the ring to re-group, she gets back on the apron and spits water at Tam as she approaches her. Kagetsu pulls Tam out of the ring and throws her into the chairs at ringside, she quickly gets back into the ring and goes for a tope suicida, but Tam moves and she lands on Oedo Tai on accident. Tam goes up to the top turnbuckle and dives down onto Oedo Tai with a plancha suicida, she puts Kagetsu up on the apron and applies a Dragon Sleeper while sitting on the top turnbuckle. She lets go after a moment and delivers the Destiny Hammer, cover by Tam but it gets a two count. Tam picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu elbows her off, she goes off the ropes but Tam catches her with a backdrop suplex. Kagetsu springs back to her feet and hits a kick combination, Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu and she goes to the top turnbuckle, but Tam recovers and joins her before she can jump off. Superplex by Tam but Kagetsu gets to her feet and hits a running knee, Tam fires back with a running knee of her own and both wrestlers are down on the mat.

Kagetsu vs. Tam NakanoThey elbow each other as they slowly return to their feet, kick by Kagetsu and she goes off the ropes, but Tam catches her with a kick of her own. Two more kicks by Tam, she picks up Kagetsu around the waist and hits a German suplex hold for two. t gets Kagetsu up and hits a double underhook facebuster, but again Kagetsu kicks out. Tam gets Kagetsu’s back but Kagetsu slides away, she pushes Tam into the referee and spits red mist in her face. Tiger Suplex Hold by Kagetsu, but it only gets a two count. Ebisu drop by Kagetsu in front of the corner, she goes up top and nails the Oedo Coaster, but Tam gets a shoulder up on the cover. Kagetsu quickly picks up Tam and goes for the Death Valley Bomb, but Tam gets away and nails a roundhouse kick. Tiger Suplex Hold by Tam, but it gets a two. Tam goes off the ropes and delivers a trio of running knees, Tiger Suplex by Tam and she picks Kagetsu back up, debuting the Twilight Dream Suplex for the three count! Tam Nakano wins!

While I am not a huge fan of no-selling without a receipt, which Kagetsu did once here, overall I really enjoyed this. Tam has always been a fun wrestler but she hasn’t always been technically sound, being in Stardom as a regular for the last couple years has really helped her grow and she has started pulling everything together. Kagetsu is a machine and does everything with such precision; there may not be a tighter wrestler in Joshi than her just with her movements and execution. I wouldn’t have minded if the match was a longer but it was a fast paced and entertaining match, definitely worth a watch.  Recommended

Tokyo Cyber Squad vs. vs. Bea Priestley & Jamie Hayter
(c) Jungle Kyona and Konami vs. Bea Priestley and Jamie Hayter
Goddesses of Stardom Championship

In our first title match of the evening, Tokyo Cyber Squad defends their titles against the Top Gaijin in Stardom. Even though at the time of the match Bea and Jamie were in different factions, they still wrestle together fairly often, including teaming in the Goddesses of Stardom League. Kyona and Konami won the Goddesses of Stardom Championship in July, with this being their fourth defense of the titles. Having an inter-faction team challenging is unusual, and leaves a lot of possibilities for what could happen if Bea and Jamie win the belts.

Jungle Kyona & Konami vs. Bea Priestley & Jamie HayterThis one is Joined in Progress, with Jamie in the ring with Kyona. Elbows by Jamie in the corner and she hits a lariat, Jungle fires back with her own lariat but Jamie hits another one too as they go back and forth. Elbows by Jamie and she his a sidewalk slam onto her knee followed by a running knee. Falcon Arrow by Jamie, but Kyona kicks out of the cover. Jamie picks up Kyona and goes for a suplex, but Kyona blocks it and hits a vertical suplex of her own. Big lariat by Kyona, and the match clips ahead to Konami being in he ring with Bea as Konami gets on the top turnbuckle. Bea elbows her before she can jump off and joins her, but Kyona comes up from behind and hits Bea. Kyona slams Jamie on the mat, she then grabs Bea and powerbombs her onto Jamie’s head while Konami delivers a missile dropkick. Konami picks up Bea and hits a suplex, Buzzsaw Kick by Konami and she covers Bea for two.

Konami quickly applies an armlock which she switches to an armbar, Jamie tries to break it up but Kyona dropkicks her out of the ring. Konami rolls Bea around the ring while keeping the armbar applied, but Bea gets to the ropes for the break. Konami goes off the ropes but Jamie cuts her off with a lariat, she dumps Kyona out of the ring too before diving out onto both of them with a tope suicida. Jamie brings Konami onto the apron and goes for a side slam, but Konami blocks it. Bea jumps up to the top turnbuckle and hits her from behind, she gets back into the ring quickly with Konami and Jamie, and the Gaijin connect with a double strike to Konami. Knee to the back of the head by Bea, she gets Konami on her shoulders and nails the Queen’s Landing for the three count! Bea Priestley and Jamie Hayter are the new champions!

Samurai TV clipped this down by several minutes but what they showed was entertaining. I love Bea and Jamie so I have no issue with them winning the titles, and if it means more of Jamie in Stardom than that’s even better. Even in defeat, Kyona looked great and Konami was her usual sound self. I am sure this match was better in full, but at least everything they decided to show us looked pretty fun.

Tokyo Cyber Squad vs. Donna del Mondo
Death Yama-san, Hana Kimura, and Hirsch vs. Giulia, Maika, and Syuri Kondo

This was billed as Giulia and Maika teaming with a mystery partner, and the mystery turned out to be Syuri! Leading up to the match, Giulia was tasked with coming up with her own group to battle Tokyo Cyber Squad and her enemy Hana Kimura. Andras Miyagi was originally a candidate, but was rejected by Giulia. So she first went to Just Tap Out to recruit their young star, Maika, meaning she only needed one more. Much to everyone’s surprise, Syuri Kondo came out to complete the team. Syuri was in UFC as recently as mid-2019 but after a few years just doing MMA, Syuri returned to professional wrestling last summer. The point of the match is to put over Giulia’s new group, but hopefully in the process they put together a good match as well.

Death and Maika start the match, Death tries doing her shtick but Maika attacks her from behind and applies a wristlock. Death gets out of it and tags Hirsch while Syuri also tags in, Hirsch works a headlock which is reversed by Syuri. Hard shoulderblock by Syuri but Hirsch kips up, snapmare by Syuri and she kicks Hirsch in the back. Hirsch ducks the PK, they return to their feet both both miss their strike attempts. Giulia and Hana tag in and they immediately start trading elbows, they switch to trading boots until Death knees Giulia from the apron to give Hana the advantage. Hana boots Giulia out of the ring and goes out after her, as all six wrestlers brawl on the floor and into the crowd. Back in the ring, Death and Hana double team Giulia before Hana tags in Death as the legal wrestler. Giulia quickly gets back in control and chokes Death against the ropes, with her teammates lending a hand. Giulia tags in Maika, Maika stomps down Death in the corner, armdrags by Maika and she hits a monkey flip. Maika applies a Fujiwara Armbar but Death gets into the ropes, Syuri is tagged in and she kicks Death in the back.

Tokyo Cyber Squad vs. Donna del MondoAll three members of Giulia’s team apply submission holds in the ring, they let go after a moment as the ring clears for Death and Syuri, with Syuri applying a hanging armbar over the top rope. Syuri gets back in the ring but Death chops her in the throat and makes the tag to Hana. Hana boots Syuri in the face twice, cover by Hana but it gets two. Hana grabs Syuri but Syuri blocks the suplex attempt, Giulia comes in and clubs on Hana but Hana dropkicks both of them. Death and Hirsch both come in the ring, TCS gets their opponents in opposite corners and all three take turns delivering running strikes. Dropkicks by Tokyo Cyber Squad, and they pose in the ring while their opponents are slumped in the corner. Hana grabs Syuri and hits a vertical suplex, cover by Hana but it gets a two count. Hana goes off the ropes but Syuri kicks her in the stomach and hits a half hatch suplex. PK by Syuri, and she covers Hana for two.

Syuri tags in Giulia, Giulia goes to the top turnbuckle and delivers a missile dropkick. Maika comes in too but Hana rams them into each other, she goes off the ropes but Maika hits her with a face crusher. Giulia applies a crossface but it gets quickly broken up, Giulia picks up Hana but Hana slides away from her and Giulia eats a double DDT. Boot by Hana and she covers Giulia, but the cover is broken up. Hana puts Giulia in the Ground Manjikatame, but Giulia gets into the ropes for the break. Giulia recovers and boots Hana, Hana rolls to her corner and tags in Hirsch. Giulia and Hirsch trade elbows until Hirsch hits a release German, running knee by Hirsch and she hits a moonsault for a two count. Hirsch applies a cross armbreaker but Syuri breaks it up, Syuri and Maika clear the ring before double teaming Hirsch. Knee by Giulia to Hirsch, she picks her back up and nails the Glorious Driver for the three count! Giulia, Maika, and Syuri are the winners!

This was a good way to introduce a new group, although I wouldn’t necessarily say the match was great. Hirsch felt out of place during some of her spots, and disappeared for long stretches. That’s not to say she isn’t a fine wrestler, but probably without a lot of prior experience with this batch of wrestlers there were definitely some chemistry issues here and there. Maika was better but she is only in her first year of wrestling, so really it was up to the other four to carry things. They needed to make it 3 vs. 3 to form the new faction, but for match-quality purposes it would have worked better with just four of them. Hana and Giulia looked great however, with Hana in particular standing out. Both groups also worked together well, which is a plus. The beginning and the end were a little awkward at times but the middle portion was well done, and I think they accomplished their goal of introducing two new wrestlers to Stardom fans.  Mildly Recommended

Arisa Hoshiki vs. Utami Hayashishita
(c) Arisa Hoshiki vs. Utami Hayashishita
Wonder of Stardom Championship

Finally I get to watch Utami in a big singles match. Arisa Hoshiki has been on fire since winning the Cinderella Tournament last April, as she won the Wonder of Stardom Championship in May and is already on her 9th (!!!) defense. Along the way she has beaten Tam Nakano, Hazuki, Jungle Kyona, Kagetsu, and Konami to assert herself as the true Ace of Stardom. She is against the younger and less experienced Utami, who came on strong last year in her rookie year but has had some struggles staying healthy and getting the big wins. This would certainly be the biggest win of her young career, but knocking out one of the top wrestlers in the promotion will be no easy feat.

Arisa asks for a knucklelock to start but Utami kicks her instead, Arisa pulls Utami by the hair and elbows her, but Utami elbows Arisa back and the two trade blows. Dropkick to the back by Utami and she kicks Arisa into the corner, snapmare by Utami and she kicks Arisa in the back. Irish whip by Utami to the corner and she hits a running elbow, she tosses Arisa to the mat before kicking her for a two count cover. Neck crank by Utami but Arisa wiggles to the ropes and makes it for the break. Utami picks up Arisa and hits a scoop slam, she goes off the ropes but Arisa catches her with a pump kick followed by a high kick and a jumping knee. Utami rolls out of the ring but Arisa goes out after her, she rams Utami’s head into the apron, busting her head open in the process. The referee gets Utami a towel as he checks on Utami’s cut, but she is deemed to be ok as Arisa nails her with a 1399 off the ropes down to the floor.

Arisa Hoshiki vs. Utami HayashishitaArisa returns to the ring with the bloody Utami slowly following, mounted punches by Arisa and she punches her again as they get to their feet. Cover by Arisa, but the referee won’t count (probably due to all the illegal punches). Back up, Arisa goes for a kick but Utami ducks it and applies a sleeper. Arisa switches positions with her and applies a choke, but Utami gets into the ropes for the break. Kick by Arisa but Utami ducks the next one, she goes for a suplex but Arisa elbows out of it. They trade blows before Arisa hits a high kick, she springboards off the ropes but Utami catches her with a release German suplex. German suplex hold by Utami, but it gets a two count. Utami picks up Arisa and puts her in an Argentine Backbreaker, Arisa slides away but Utami puts her in a hanging submission. Schwein by Utami, but Arisa kicks out of the cover. She goes for the backbreaker again but Arisa gets away and applies a Cobra Clutch, she lets go before Utami can reach the ropes and kicks her in the head.

Arisa goes for the Shining Star Cutter but Utami grabs her around the waist to block it, sleeper hold by Utami and she goes off the ropes but Arisa catches her with a jumping knee. Arisa goes up to the top turnbuckle and delivers the 1399, cover by Arisa but it gets two. Running knee by Arisa, she goes off the ropes but again Utami blocks the Shining Star Cutter attempt and puts Arisa in the Argentine Backbreaker. She slides her to the front and hits the German suplex hold, but Arisa kicks out at two. Utami picks up Arisa and sits her on the second rope, she goes for a suplex but Arisa knocks her back and finally hits the Shining Star Cutter. Arisa waits for Utami to get to her knees and plants her with a Shining Impact, she lifts her up instead of completing the cover and nails her with the Brazilian Kick for the three count! Arisa Hoshiki wins and retains the championship.

I strongly feel that blood helps most matches (unless it is just overdone on a given event) and I think that was the case here as well. Everything just feels more real when a wrestler with blood running down their face starts making their comeback, its an image that sparks more emotion than most other situations in wrestling. Without that added drama, this was a good match but probably on the lower end of Arisa’s recent big matches. I actively dislike the Shining Star Cutter in any variation and this match showed why, as she kept going for it at bad times and when she finally did ‘hit’ the move, she didn’t hit it cleanly and it was just a rough looking spot. Everything else in the match was smooth at least, and while Utami is still working on some things she showed the fire here that you’d expect from a young challenger. Arisa being extra vicious (such as pulling Utami up after the Shining Impact) was a bit puzzling as normally she’s a pretty pure babyface, but maybe seeing blood just got her excited too. Overall a fun match, not a high-end one but entertaining nonetheless.  Recommended

Mayu Iwatani vs. Momo Watanabe
(c) Mayu Iwatani vs. Momo Watanabe
World of Stardom Championship

Main event time! While Arisa Hoshiki owned 2019, Mayu Iwatani is looking to make 2020 her year. She won the World of Stardom Championship from Bea Priestley on November 4th, with this being her second defense of the title. She was named the Tokyo Joshi Sports Female Wrestler of the Year so she has a lot of pressure to keep delivering. She is against Momo, who many consider one of the best wrestlers in Stardom even as she has been slightly pushed aside for the next wave of wrestlers. But Momo is only 19 years old and is main eventing in front of one of the biggest Korakuen Hall crowds in Stardom history, so I think overall she is still doing ok. This is their first non-tournament singles match since 2018, when Momo defeated Mayu to defend her Wonder of Stardom Championship. Mayu hasn’t beaten Momo in a singles match since 2016, so she looks to change that trend to retain her new championship.

They circle each other to start, Mayu gets Momo’s waist but Momo trips her as they jockey for position on the mat. Momo applies a kneelock but Mayu gets into the ropes for the break, Momo picks up Mayu and starts working on her arm. Kick to the arm by Momo but Mayu cradles her, she goes for a dropkick but Momo moves and applies a modified double armbar. Mayu eventually gets to the ropes, she gets out of the ring but Momo goes up to the top turnbuckle and dives out to the floor with a Diving Somato. Momo gets back into the ring but gets tired of waiting for Mayu so she goes out to get her, dropkick by Momo in the corner and she hits a side slam followed by a knee to the back of the head. Running Somato by Momo, but Mayu kicks out of the cover. Momo picks up Mayu  and drops her with the B Driver, but that gets a two count as well. Momo goes up to the top turnbuckle but Mayu grabs her from behind before she can jump off, she goes for a powerbomb but Momo slides away. Mayu blocks Momo’s suplex attempt and kicks her in the head, dragon suplex by Mayu but Momo quickly recovers and hits a tiger suplex.

Mayu Iwatani vs. Momo WatanabeBoth wrestlers are down on the mat, they trade elbows as they return to their feet, Dodonpa by Mayu but Momo kicks out of the cover. Mayu goes up to the top turnbuckle but Momo avoids the moonsault and kicks Mayu in the head. Momo gets on the second turnbuckle and hits a Diving Somato, she goes up top and hits another Diving Somato for a two count cover. Momo locks up Mayu and hits a release Tequila Sunrise, she nails the Peach Sunrise but Mayu barely kicks out of the cover. Momo picks up Mayu and delivers a double wrist-clutch suplex hold, but that gets a two count as well. Momo picks up Mayu and puts her on the second turnbuckle, she goes for another suplex but Mayu blocks it and his a reverse hurricanrana. Mayu quickly goes up top and hits a Frog Splash, but she only gets two. She goes up top again and this time delivers a moonsault, but again Momo kicks out of the cover. DDT by Mayu and she hits a tombstone piledriver, she nails the Two Stage Dragon Suplex Hold and she picks up the three count! Mayu Iwatani wins and retains the championship.

Post match: During the usual promo work after a big match, Bea came down in support of her faction teammate Momo Watanabe, but instead of helping her she kneed her in the head. She then announced that she was joining Oedo Tai, as the group came into the ring and celebrated with her. At the end as Mayu was closing the show, Sareee showed up on the screen in a recorded video, challenging Mayu to a match!

This match was clipped by Samurai TV but I think it was mostly mat work that we missed and nothing too critical. A great match between these two, and I hope Momo’s rumored demotion from the top tier in Stardom doesn’t come true as she may be the best wrestler on the roster (and is only 19 years old). The chemistry these two have is off the charts, everything else on the card felt pretty fluid but Momo and Mayu took it to another level as they put on a masterclass. Momo showed how important the match was to her with the Diving Somato out of the ring, which looked great, and the match had the fast past action you’d expect from Mayu. My only small quibble is that Momo went through all her finishers (including the Peach Sunrise), making it unclear in the home stretch how Momo would have even won the match since she had already emptied her arsenal instead of keeping a big move in her pocket. Still, that is more excusable in a Korakuen Hall main event title match as wrestlers tend to go all out and kick out of things that normally work. I’m not sure if they quite reached that “must see” MOTYC level but it was critically close, and either way a fitting ending to a quality Korakuen Hall show.  Highly Recommended

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Stardom New Years Stars 2020 on 1/11/20 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-new-years-stars-2020-january-11-20-review/ Sat, 25 Jan 2020 11:28:03 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=15243 With Kagetsu vs. Giulia!

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Stardom New Year Stars 1/11/20

Event: Stardom New Years Stars 2020
Date: January 11th, 2020
Location: Osaka World Pavilion in Osaka, Japan
Announced Attendance: 221

This year I am going to try to balance the Stardom reviews so that I am not reviewing everything, but so that I am not only hitting the really big shows. I am still going to review all the Korakuen Hall events, but beyond that I am going to selectively review other shows of theirs if something catches my attention. For this show, two things caught my eye – Kagetsu vs. Giulia and Riho vs. Miyagi. That was enough to convince me to review the show, as some of the other matches look like fun too. Here is the full card:

As I am watching this event from Stardom World, all matches will be shown in full. There were a few match changes due to the flu going around Japan, but none of the bigger matches had any modifications. Every wrestler on the card has a profile on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

AZM & Utami Hayashishita vs. Itsuki Hoshino & Saya Iida
AZM and Utami Hayashishita vs. Itsuki Hoshino and Saya Iida

We jump into it with Queen’s Quest versus a couple rookies. This is pretty low on the card for Utami, as even as a rookie she was rarely in the opening match, but on smaller events sometimes card shuffling is required, especially with wrestlers being out due to the flu causing last minute changes. Saya Iida is the veteran of her team as she debuted last January, while Itsuki had her first match in November. The rookies have zero chance of winning but may be able to put on a good showing, especially against the younger AZM.

Utami starts the match with Saya but Itsuki immediately runs in too as they double team Utami. Dropkicks by Saya and Itsuki to Utami’s back while she is in the ropes, cover by Saya but it gets two. Saya picks up Utami but Utami blocks the slam attempt and hits one of her own. She tries to tag in AZM but Itsuki cuts her off, Saya picks up Utami but again she fails on the slam attempt. Saya gets away from Utami, Itsuki comes in and they both dropkick Utami. Saya finally manages to scoop slam Utami, she covers her but AZM breaks it up. Saya throws Utami towards the corner but Utami reverses it, Saya avoids Utami’s charge and chops her repeatedly in the chest. Utami eventually ducks one and delivers a dropkick, but again Itsuki runs in and knocks AZM off the apron before Utami can make the tag. Saya tags in Itsuki, dropkicks by Itsuki and she covers Utami for two. Itsuki applies a sleeper but Utami quickly gets out of it and applies one of her own, but Itsuki gets into the ropes.

Queen's Quest vs. Itsuki Hoshino & Saya IidaItsuki goes for a hurricanrana but Utami blocks it, victory roll by Itsuki but Utami rolls through it for her own two count. Itsuki goes off the ropes but Utami catches her with a scoop slam and finally tags in AZM. AZM and Itsuki trade elbows until AZM knocks Itsuki to the mat, AZM goes off the ropes but Itsuki sneaks behind her and applies a sleeper hold. Utami breaks it up, Itsuki goes off the ropes but Utami armdrags her. PK by AZM, but Saya breaks up the pin. Utami takes care of her, Irish whip by AZM to Itsuki but Saya comes back and AZM eats a double dropkick. AZM ends up in the corner and gets dropkicked some more, cover by Itsuki but it gets two. Itsuki elbows AZM into the corner but AZM slides to the apron when she charges in, missile dropkick by AZM and she covers Itsuki, but Saya breaks it up. AZM goes back to the top turnbuckle but Itsuki avoids the diving footstomp, hurricanrana by Itsuki but AZM gets a shoulder up. Buzzsaw Kick by AZM, she goes up top and this time she nails the diving footstomp for the three count! AZM and Utami Hayashishita are the winners!

If you had told me that Utami would be the Face in Peril in this match and that Itsuki would get in so much offense, I’d have never believed you. It’s wild the way they structured this match, with the rookies basically dominating. Utami only hit a couple moves in the whole match and AZM didn’t fair much better. There was at least one pretty noticeable mistake (oddly enough, made by Utami and not one of the rookies) but otherwise it was pretty fluid and both teams worked together well. I don’t know if the match was good but it was definitely interesting and unexpected, so I’ll give them some credit for that considering it was a late addition to the card.

Riho vs. Andras Miyagi
Andras Miyagi vs. Riho

What an interesting pairing. This is only the second time ever these two have faced off, and their first singles match. Andras has been having a tough go at it since joining Stardom, as she hasn’t really found her place while other wrestlers around her have elevated up the card. I’m not sure where her future lies in Stardom as she seems to be floating through with no real purpose. Riho is just a part time wrestler as she also wrestles in AEW, however she does hold the High Speed Championship (which is not on the line). Andras looked flat the last time I saw her, and with the card placement here I am not really expecting her to feel compelled to go all out in this match either.

Riho vs. Andras Miyagi

They circle each other to start but quickly end up on the mat, Riho works a waistlock but Andras reverses it. Andras gets in the dominate position but Riho kicks her off as she returns to her feet, Andras pushes Riho into the ropes and she gives a clean break. Andras goes off the ropes and hits a shoulderblock, but Riho bridges out of the pin and headscissors Andras out of the ring. Riho goes after her and hits an ax handle, but Andras grabs her and hits a scoop slam on the floor. Andras slides Riho back into the ring and joins her, stomps by Andras and she chokes Riho with her boot. Snapmare by Andras and she applies a camel clutch, but Riho inches to the ropes and forces the break. Andras picks up Riho and hits a delayed scoop slam, cover by Andras but it gets two. Riho fights back but Andras boots her in the chest, Andras throws Riho into the corner and hits a running elbow.

Another elbow by Andras, she gets Riho up on her shoulders and spins her around before delivering a Liger Bomb for a two count. Riho rolls out of the ring to try to regroup but Andras goes out too and throws Riho into the ring post. Andras tries to ram her with a chair but Riho moves, Riho gets back in the ring to escape and hits Andras with a Tiger Feint Kick as she gets on the apron. Riho goes for a diving footstomp but Andras moves, dropkick by Riho and she puts Andras in a crossface. Andras inches to the ropes to get the break, quick footstomp off the second turnbuckle by Riho and she goes all the way up to deliver another diving footstomp for a two count cover. Riho picks up Andras but Andras quickly applies a crucifix pin, Riho gets out of it and knees Andras in the face. Riho goes off the ropes but Andras pushes the referee in front of her, Riho rolls Andras to the mat with a clutch hold and keeps her pinned for the three count! Riho is the winner.

I’m not really sure what they are doing with Andras and this match didn’t give me any clarity. It was a good enough match, about what you’d expect on the lower midcard of a smaller show, but Andras has just become a punching bag the last few months as she keeps getting slotted below new wrestlers coming into the promotion. Unlike Andras’ match with Giulia, these two had pretty good chemistry but some of the transitions were non-existent, and the ending didn’t really flow with everything else they had been doing. Not a bad match but ultimately forgettable, aside from the general confusion surrounding Andras Miyagi.

Starlight Kid vs. Leyla Hirsch
Leyla Hirsch vs. Starlight Kid

This match is part of the High Speed Grand Prix. To determine the next challenger for the High Speed Championship, Stardom is having a quick round robin tournament. This is the first match of the tournament for both Leyla Hirsch and Starlight Kid, so its still anyone’s game as they look to get an early advantage to win a chance at the title. This is Leyla’s first tour in Japan, so she is looking to impress so it isn’t her last.

Starlight Kid vs. Leyla HirschStarlight Kid tries going right into a fast exchange but Leyla shoulderblocks her down, they trade armdrags and leg trips before Starlight Kid hits a dropkick. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes but Leyla hits another hard shoulderblock, bodyscissors by Leyla and she lets go after a moment to stomp on Starlight Kid’s back. Irish whip by Leyla and she goes for a slam, but Starlight Kid reverses it with a DDT. Tiger Feint Kick by Starlight Kid and she hits a standing moonsault for a two count. Starlight Kid picks up Leyla, strikes by Leyla and she dropkicks Starlight Kid in the chest. Running double knee by Leyla in the corner, she covers Starlight Kid but it gets a two count. Leyla goes for a cross armbreaker but Starlight Kid quickly gets to the ropes, Leyla picks up Starlight Kid but Starlight Kid slides down her back and hits a swinging fisherman neckbreaker for two. Starlight Kid goes up top and delivers a diving crossbody, she picks up Leyla and nails a leg clutch suplex hold, but Leyla gets a shoulder up. Starlight Kid goes for the Yoshi Tonic but Leyla shrugs her off and drops her with a modified Samoan Drop. Running knee by Leyla, and she covers Starlight Kid for two. Leyla gets Starlight Kid around the waist but Starlight Kid cradles her for a quick two count. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes but Leyla levels her with a lariat, Leyla applies the cross armbreaker and Starlight Kid has no choice but to submit! Leyla Hirsch is your winner.

I hope that Leyla sticks around in Stardom, as she offers something that the High Speed division doesn’t really have. She is short in stature but is a power wrestler, which is a fun dynamic that gives the wrestlers a lot more options to put on a unique match. This was too short to get excited about but I enjoyed it, it didn’t have the chemistry issues that one may expect and its too early in her run to know if Leyla winning with the armbreaker was just a cop out to get a quick win or if its a move she is going to use to win matches regularly. Starlight Kid continues to impress with her smoothness but really this was more about Leyla showing why even as a first time wrestler in the promotion she still could win the tournament. Wish it was a longer but fun while it lasted.  Mildly Recommended

Bea Priestley, Leo Onozaki & Momo Watanabe vs. Jamie Hayter & Saki Kashima, & Zoey Skye
Bea Priestley, Onozaki, and Watanabe vs. Jamie Hayter, Kashima, and Zoey Skye

Next is a faction battle, as Queen’s Quest takes on Oedo Tai (and Zoey Skye). This match had some changes due to Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire getting the flu, but honestly I’d rather see a six wrestler tag than a ten wrestler tag anyway. Saki Kashima is a new member of Oedo Tai, having just turned on her STARS teammates in evil fashion. The look suits her well. She teams with her new friend Jamie Hayter and Zoey Skye, who we last saw in Stardom wrestling as Dust. Leo being this high on the card is a bit annoying but hopefully they can overcome that and put on a fun match.

Queen's Quest vs. Oedo TaiOedo Tai attacks before the match with Saki staying in as the legal wrestler against Leo, scoop slam by Saki and she rubs Leo’s face along the top rope. Saki tags in Jamie and she rams Leo into the turnbuckle as Oedo Tai each take a turn beating up Leo, Leo makes a comeback against Zoey and makes the hot tag to Bea. Bea suplexes Zoey, they trade kick attempts until Bea lands with one but Zoey hits a Codebreaker for a two count. Zoey tags Jamie, Jamie knocks Bea into the corner but Bea blocks the suplex attempt and hits a high knee. Lariat by Jamie and both wrestlers are down, they both slowly crawl to their corners to tag in Saki and Momo. Momo kicks Saki in the chest, dropkick by Momo but Saki avoids her next attempt as Jamie and Zoey both run in to deliver running strikes. Side slam backbreaker by Jamie, Saki goes up top and hits a diving footstomp on Momo for the two count. Momo comes back with a side slam to Saki but Saki throws her to the mat by her hair. Saki cradles Mom but Bea kicks her in the head to break it up, Somato by Momo but it only gets a two count. Momo picks up Saki and goes for the Peach Sunrise but Saki blocks it, high kick by Momo but Saki pins down Momo with a crucifix hold for two. Momo goes for the B Driver but Saki blocks it and hits a double underhook facebuster. Momo immediately fires off a head kick and crawls to her corner to tag Leo, elbow to the back by Leo and she hits a cutter for two. Leo goes off the ropes but Saki kicks her in the chest, Saki slides out to the apron and kicks Leo between the ropes. Back in the ring, Bea runs in and knees Saki, suplex by Momo and Leo cradles Saki for two. Elbows by Leo, she goes off the ropes but Jamie hands Saki an Oedo Tai sign and she hits Leo with it. My Emblem by Saki to Leo, and she picks up the three count! Oedo Tai wins!

I don’t really like Stardom’s trend recently of having Leo Onozaki in these types of matches, as it makes the “fall guy” just way too obvious. When she is anywhere outside the opener there is a 90% chance she is going to be pinned, which is an issue since it kills some of the drama. Plus I’d rather see a high end wrestler in there with this group, not a wrestler that likely will never ‘make it’ past the midcard. Anyway, aside from that complaint I enjoyed the match, Bea looked great in the few things they let her actually do and Saki seems to be embracing her evil ways very well, a welcome change for her. An easy watch with some solid wrestling from some great wrestlers, just predictable and it could have been a few minutes longer.  Mildly Recommended

Giulia vs. Kagetsu
Kagetsu vs. Giulia

With Kagetsu’s last Stardom match before retiring less than a month away, before leaving she first goes up against the newest Stardom wrestler – Giulia. Giulia thus far is undefeated in singles matches since joining Stardom in early December, as she has defeated Hazuki, Saki Kashima, and Andras Miyagi with a draw to Hana Kimura. She seems to be getting a pretty good push so far, which she may not be ready for against wrestlers she is still finding chemistry with. Kagetsu as I mentioned is retiring very soon so I am sure she won’t be holding back, as all wrestlers want to go out on a high note.

They lockup to start but end up in the corner, leading to a clean break. A Test of Strength with Kagetsu winning follows, but Giulia gets away from her and they return to their feet. They jockey for position on the mat, Kagetsu gets in the dominate position but Giulia makes it to the ropes for the break. Kagetsu kicks Giulia in the chest and chokes her in the corner, Irish whip by Kagetsu and she hits a running elbow. Dropkick to the knee by Kagetsu, she gets a drink of water and spits it in Giulia’s face. The referee complains so she spits water in his face as well, Kagetsu goes back to Giulia but Giulia fights back with elbows and they exchange blows. Big boot by Giulia but Kagetsu kicks her in the midsection, she jumps up to the top turnbuckle but Giulia elbows her down to the apron. Giulia snaps Kagetsu’s neck on the top rope, Kagetsu falls out of the ring and Giulia goes out after her, slamming Kagetsu on the floor. Curb Stomp by Giulia on the stage, she brings Kagetsu back to ringside and throws her into the ring post before finally back into the ring. Giulia sets up Kagetsu in the corner across the second rope and knees her in the midsection, she hangs Kagetsu over the side of the apron and boots her in the head. Back in the ring again, Giulia goes up top and hits a missile dropkick to the back of Kagetsu’s head. She goes up top again and hits another missile dropkick, cover by Giulia but it gets two.

Kagetsu vs. GiuliaGiulia applies a crossface, but Kagetsu gets to the ropes for the break. Falcon Arrow by Giulia, and she covers Kagetsu for two. Kagetsu recovers and gets Giulia on her shoulders, but Giulia slides away and stomps on Kagetsu. Strike combination by Kagetsu and she hits the Ebisu Drop, cover by Kagetsu but it gets a two count. Kagetsu goes up top but Giulia recovers and joins her, superplex by Giulia but Kagetsu comes back with a running knee strike. Big boot by Giulia, and both wrestlers are down on the mat. Giulia picks up Kagetsu and nails the Glorious Buster, but Kagetsu kicks out of the cover. As she kicks out, Kagetsu puts Giulia in a hammerlock hold, but Giulia gets to the ropes. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu in front of the corner, she goes up top but again Giulia recovers and joins her on the turnbuckles. Elbows by Giulia, she pulls Kagetsu off the turnbuckles and hits a tombstone piledriver. Glorious Driver by Giulia, but Kagetsu barely kicks out of the pin. Giulia goes for a submission but Kagetsu quickly gets away and delivers a running knee, another knee by Kagetsu and she hits an Ebisu Drop near the corner. She goes up top and this time nails the Oedo Coaster, cover by Kagetsu but Giulia kicks out. Kagetsu picks up Giulia and gets her on her shoulders as the bell rings, signifying that time has expired. Kagetsu hits the Death Valley Bomb anyway, but the match is a Time Limit Draw.

This was fun but man there were issues with offensive transitions. There were several times that one wrestler would do a major move and the other just took over on offense for no explainable reasons seconds later, I normally give a lot of leeway for that but it shouldn’t be so obvious. Beyond that, this is the best I have seen of Giulia so far in Stardom as they looked like they had been wrestling against each other for years with how the match was structured and how it seamlessly flowed. There was a bit of time wasting outside the ring as it took a few minutes to get going, but once they got focused the action was fast paced and generally interesting. Even though it was a smaller show they weren’t holding back any, aside from the lack of Kagetsu Poison Mist, but maybe Giulia just didn’t want her face covered in green. Pretty solid, some definite issues that would keep it out of any MOTYC lists but entertaining nonetheless.  Recommended

Saya Kamitani & STARS vs. Tokyo Cyber Squad
Hoshiki, Iwatani, Nakano, and Kamitani vs. Yama-san, Kimura, Kyona, and Konami

We end the show with an eight wrestler faction war. On one side we have STARS, led by the Joshi Wrestler of the Year and World of Stardom Champion Mayu Iwatani. They are against Tokyo Cyber Squad, led by Hana Kimura. Its unusual to see a rookie in the main event, but that is one of the aspects of smaller shows, it gives the promotion more flexibility to do new things. Both teams have their strengths and weaknesses so either team can win, I’m ready for some Joshi Chaos to end the show.

Hana and Saya start the match for their respective teams, Saya fires away at Hana with elbows but Hana just invites her to throw more before eventually booting her to the mat. All of TCS attack/taunt Saya while she is in the ropes, Death comes in for a moment as Saya is double teamed. Hana tags in Kyona as she takes her turn on the rookie, with Konami helping from the apron as well. The rookie beatdown continues until Saya dropkicks Death and makes the hot tag to Mayu. Mayu rolls Death to the mat and stomps her in the head, Kyona and Hana come in but so do Tam and Arisa as the odds are evened up. STARS gets the better of the exchange, the ring clears leaving just Mayu and Death and Death thrusts Mayu in the throat. She tags in Hana, Hana goes off the ropes and she boots Mayu in the head. Another boot by Hana, she picks up Mayu but Mayu kicks her in the midsection. She goes off the ropes but is kicked by Konami from the apron, delayed vertical suplex by Hana to Mayu and she gets a two count cover. Hana picks up Mayu and applies the Ground Manjikatame, but Tam and Arisa quickly break it up. Hana goes off the ropes but Mayu catches her with a Sling Blade, Mayu tags in Arisa and Arisa hits a double knee to Hana in the corner. Double kneedrop by Arisa, and she covers Hana for two. Arisa picks up Hana but Hana elbows her and the two trade blows. Jumping knee by Arisa but Death run in and DDTs her, running boot by Hana and she covers Arisa for two. Hana tags Konami, strike combination by Konami but Arisa fires back with a kick of her own and both wrestlers end up on the mat.

STARS vs. Tokyo Cyber SquadArisa tags Tam, boot by Tam to Konami and she hits a cutter. Tam goes off the ropes but Konami catches her kick and applies an ankle hold. German suplex by Konami and she hits a buzzsaw kick, but Tam kicks out of the cover. Bridging Suplex by Konami, but Saya breaks up the count. This leads to all the wrestlers running in and hitting their signature moves, Konami and Tam crawl to their corners and tag in Kyona and Saya. Kyona kicks at Saya, she goes off the ropes but Saya catches her with a dropkick. Konami kicks Saya from the apron, Hana comes in and helps Kyona hit an assisted face crusher. Sliding lariat by Kyona, she picks up Saya but Mayu runs in with Tam to help. They get cleared out of the ring, Kyona goes for a pescado but STARS move and she ends up landing on Tokyo Cyber Squad. Tam and Mayu both go up to different turnbuckles and dive out of the ring with dives onto their opponents, they rolls Kyona back into the ring and Tam, Arisa, and Mayu all superkick her. Saya goes up top and delivers a missile dropkick, cover by Saya but the pin is broken up. Saya hits the handstand kneedrop but Kyona avoids the running Shooting Star Press, she goes for a cradle but Saya reverses it for one of her own for two. STARS get in the ring but Kyona moves when they all go for dropkicks, TCS come in and they dropkick the members of STARS. Hard elbow by Kyona, but Saya gets a shoulder up on the cover. Kyona grabs Saya around the waist and plants her with the Hammer Throw Bomb, and she picks up the three count! Tokyo Cyber Squad win the match.

I don’t mind Saya being such a big part of this match as we saw earlier with Leo since at least Saya is being pushed as a future star, but for a main event this was still a bit lacking. It is hard for all eight wrestlers to get a chance to shine in an twelve minute match, I would have preferred that either they got more time or they trimmed a couple wrestlers. The plus here is that both teams work together really well, lots of fast paced exchanges and smart tag team work that made the match far more exciting than if they did just a traditional tag. Hana looked the best, probably by design, and if nothing else I can say that time flew by while I was watching this. While I’d like more from the main event, even for a smaller show, still a pretty enjoyable match.  Mildly Recommended

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Oz Academy “The Wizard of OZ” on 1/11/15 Review https://joshicity.com/oz-academy-the-wizard-of-oz-january-11-2015-review/ Sat, 11 Jan 2020 22:29:56 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=15039 Kagetsu challenges Kuragaki for the title!

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OZ Academy 1/11/15 Poster
Event: Oz Academy “The Wizard of OZ”
Date: January 11th, 2015
Location: Shinjuku FACE in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 450

*I am slowing bringing my Joshi Reviews from Puroresu Central over to Joshi City so I can have all my Joshi reviews in one place. Some features of my current reviews on this site may be missing as my style has changed over the years, however I will have it match the Joshi City review format as closely as I can. The original review date can be found at the bottom of the review, I will try not to make any major changes to the text unless I see something that needs clarifying or correcting.*

Finally an Oz Academy event popped up on the Internet, so in order to have as many promotions represented as possible I had to review it as soon as possible. This event is a pretty big one for Oz Academy, as it has the return of Sonoko Kato as well as an Oz Academy Openweight Championship match. Here is the full card:

All of the Joshi wrestlers above profiles on the website, you can click on their names to go straight to it. This event aired on GAORA TV in a two hour block, so some matches will be clipped. 

AKINO vs. Sonoko Kato

AKINO vs. Sonoko KatoAKINO starts off the match with a hurricanrana but it gets a two count. They trade elbows and then high kicks. Dragon screw by Kato and she kicks AKINO into the corner. Cannonball by Kato and she hits an avalanche cannonball for two. AKINO slaps on an armbar but Kato hits a neckbreaker and applies a Dragon Sleeper. Kato goes up top but AKINO hits a superplex. High kick by AKINO and she hits a backdrop suplex. Kato hits a dragon suplex hold, but it gets a two count. High kick by Kato and she boots AKINO in the head. Kicks by AKINO and they trade elbows as they slowly return to their feet. Kato picks up AKINO and hits the Kowloon’s Gate, but it only gets a two count. Kato goes for a kick but AKINO catches her with a powerbomb. They trade elbows, AKINO catches Kato with a running elbow smash and quickly covers her for the three count. AKINO is the winner!

The ending was a bit sudden as it felt like they still had a few more minutes in them, but it wasn’t a bad match. I guess since it was Kato’s return match from injury they wanted to just keep it simple. Not a bad way to open the show, it had some hard hitting action and no overkill.

Kaori Yoneyama vs. Miyako Matsumoto

This match is Joined in Progress, proving that there is a God. We pick up as Matsumoto falls on top of Yoneyama and dances around the ring. Yoneyama then dances around and hits a back splash. Yoneyama goes to the second turnbuckle but Matsumoto moves and hits a Shining Wizard. Scoop slam by Matsumoto, she goes up top but Yoneyama gets her feet up when she jumps off. Northern Light Suplex by Yoneyama but it gets a two count. Yoneyama goes up top and hits a senton for another two. Yoneyama cradles Matsumoto from behind and she picks up the three count. Kaori Yoneyama wins.

This was painful but luckily it was really clipped.

Kyusei Sakura Hirota and Hamuko Hoshi vs. Mayumi Ozaki and Mio Shirai

This one is also Joined in Progress, with Shirai and Hirota in the ring. Ozaki is tagged in and she hits a senton onto Hirota for a two count. Hirota is whipped in the face and is literally attacked by everyone. Triple powerbomb to Hirota but Hirota slips away from Ozaki. DDT by Ozaki and she hits a sit-down powerbomb for a two. Chops by Hirota and she hits the Oil Check. Hirota kisses Ozaki and hits a suplex for a two count. Shirai accidentally hits her friends with her pole and Hirota hits a schoolboy on Ozaki for the three count. Hirota and Hoshi are the winners.

This match was equally not good, mid-card Oz can be brutal. I can’t believe this match was 18 minutes, that would have been the worst 18 minutes of my life if it had not been so heavily clipped.

Dynamite Kansai, Aja Kong, and Manami Toyota vs. Hikaru Shida, Syuri, and Kaho Kobayashi

Dynamite Kansai, Aja Kong, and Manami Toyota vs. Hikaru Shida, Syuri, and Kaho KobayashiWe start the match with Kansai and Kobayashi in the ring, Kong is in the ring too and they take turns slamming Kobayashi. Scoop slam by Toyota as well and everyone slams Kobayashi over and over. Toyota hits a double underhook slam and applies a cross arm submission. Toyota tags in Kong and everyone attacks Kobayashi in the corner. Piledriver by Kong but the cover is broken up. Kobayashi dropkicks Toyota but Toyota boots her and hits a dropkick. Toyota goes up top and hits a missile dropkick. Toyota goes for a slam but Kobayashi rolls her up. Oklahoma Roll by Toyota but Kobayashi hits a dropkick and tags in Syuri. Kicks by Syuri to Toyota, Kong comes in but both Syuri and Shida dropkick them. Toyota is thrown in the corner, knee by Shida and Syuri hits one as well. PK by Syuri, cover, but Toyota kicks out. Syuri and Toyota trade elbows, an Toyota hits a German suplex. Heel drop by Toyota but it gets two. Kansai is tagged in and she lariats Syuri in the corner. Syuri gets away from Kansai and hits a backstabber following by a running knee. Shida comes in to help but Kansai hits a double lariat. Syuri knees Kansai and slaps on a cross armbreaker, but Kansai gets to the ropes. Syuri tags in Shida and Shida hits a missile dropkick. Jumping knee by Shida in the corner but Kansai catches the second one and flings Shida to the mat. Shida applies a Fujiwara Armbar but Kong breaks it up. Armbreaker by Shida but Kansai catches her with a backdrop suplex.

Dynamite Kansai, Aja Kong, and Manami Toyota vs. Hikaru Shida, Syuri, and Kaho Kobayashi

Kansai tags in Kong and she trades elbows with Shida. German suplex by Kong and she kicks Shida in the head. Hurricanrana by Shida and she hits Kong with a kendo stick repeatedly. Enzuigiri by Shida but Kansai runs in and lariats her. Vertical suplex by Shida and she hits a running leg kick for two. Shida hits Toyota and Kansai with her kendo stick but Kong hits her with a metal box. Shida tags in Kobayashi, and Kobayashi dropkicks Kong. More dropkicks by Kobayashi, she goes up top and hits a missile dropkick. Syuri comes in and kicks Kong but Toyota comes in and kicks Kobayashi. Kansai lariats Syuri and scoop slams Kobayashi. Kong and Kansai run into each other and Shida hits them both with kendo sticks. Kobayashi goes up top but Kong kicks her in the stomach. Lariat by Kong but the pin is broken up. Kong drops Kobayashi on her head with a backdrop suplex, she then hits a Brainbuster on Kobayashi for the three count. Kansai, Kong, and Toyota are the winners.

I am not going to lie, I really loved this match. Kobayashi is so feisty and easy to root for, and both teams made the match seem really important by constantly inferring, breaking up pins, etc. Really it was Kobayashi that made the match as she takes monster offense so well, but the whole match just clicked for me. The time flew by and unlike what the last match would have been it was a great way to spend 15+ minutes. Only knock was the first few minutes were cut out, wish I could have seen the whole thing.  Highly Recommended

(c) Tsubasa Kuragaki vs. Kagetsu
Oz Academy Openweight Championship

Tsubasa Kuragaki vs. KagetsuKuragaki pushes Kagetsu into the ropes and she hits a shoulderblock. Dropkick by Kagetsu but Kuragaki hits a lariat. Body press by Kuragaki and she hits a pair of lariats in the corner. Kuragaki gets Kagetsu on the mat but Kagetsu gets to the ropes. Dropkick by Kagetsu and she hits a vertical suplex. Lariat by Kuragaki and she hits an exploder. Kuragaki goes up top, Kagetsu joins her but Kagetsu slides out to the apron and kicks Kuragaki back to the mat. Kagetsu goes for a swandive move but Kuragaki hits her back out to the floor. They battle outside the ring and Kuragaki applies an Argentine Backbreaker. Kagetsu kicks Kuragaki and she grabs Kuragaki’s arm as she jumps off the second deck, snapping her arm over the railing. She then pulls Kuragaki back to the floor and slams her into the apron. Kagetsu kicks Kuragaki from the apron and Kagetsu hits a swandive plancha to the floor. Swandive dropkick back in the ring by Kagetsu but Kuragaki knocks Kagetsu to the mat. Kuragaki goes for a suplex but Kagetsu reverses it into a bulldog. Kicks by Kagetsu but Kuragaki slams Kagetsu to the mat.

Kuragaki goes up top but Kagetsu elbows her. Kuragaki throws Kagetsu to the floor and hits a missile dropkick. Scorpion Deathlock by Kuragaki but Kagetsu gets to the ropes. Kuragaki goes up top but Kagetsu rolls out of the way of the moonsault and kicks Kuragaki in the chest. Kagetsu goes up top and hits a diving double knee to Kuragaki’s arm. Armbar by Kagetsu but Kuragaki gets to the ropes. Kuragaki and Kagetsu trade elbows but Kagetsu hits a judo throw before applying the cross armbreaker. Kuragaki powerbombs out of it, she picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu rolls up Kuragaki for a two. Death valley bomb by Kagetsu and she hits a cross armbreaker takedown. La Magistral by Kagetsu but it gets a two count. High kick by Kagetsu but Kuragaki catches her with a backdrop suplex. Another backdrop suplex by Kuragaki and she hits a lariat. Kuragaki picks up Kagetsu and hits the Metal Wing. Kuragaki picks up Kagetsu and goes for it again but Kagetsu lands on her feet and kicked Kuragaki in the head. Lariat by Kuragaki, she picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu gets away. Kuragaki levels her with another lariat and she hits a Falcon Arrow for the three count! Tsubasa Kuragaki wins and retains the championship.

A really solid match and a fun back and forth. I wish Kuragaki had sold the arm a bit at some point but Kagetsu stayed on it at least, and it was a good ‘power offensive vs. submission holds’ match dynamic. The time of the match felt just right and it wasn’t clipped. The show started really slow but ended with two entertaining matches. Recommended

event reviewed on 2/9/15

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Stardom Year End Climax 2019 on 12/24/19 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-year-end-climax-2019-december-24-19-review/ Fri, 10 Jan 2020 23:25:07 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=14980 Hazuki's Retirement and the final Mayu vs. Kagetsu match!

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Stardom Year End Climax 2019 Poster

Event: Stardom Year End Climax 2019
Date: December 24th, 2019
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 1,334

For the last Joshi event of 2019 I plan on reviewing, I couldn’t do a much bigger show than Stardom Year End Climax 2019. This is typically one of Stardom’s biggest events of the year and 2019 is no different, as three titles will be on the line tonight. Even more importantly, the retirement match and ceremony for Hazuki will take place as one of the more popular young wrestlers in the promotion is giving her farewell. Here is the portion of the card aired by Samurai TV!:

Quite a stacked card. All wrestlers on the show have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their names above to go straight to it. As I am watching the Samurai TV! version of the show, some matches will likely be clipped.

Oedo Tai vs. Tokyo Cyber Squad
Death Yama-san, Kyona, and Ruaka vs. Hayter, Martina, and Natsu Sumire

This wasn’t the first match on the show, but Samurai TV mercifully skipped the rookie match so we jump straight to this one. We start with a classic stable match, with Tokyo Cyber Squad taking on Oedo Tai! These are all the wrestlers from each faction that didn’t have bigger matches on the card, but it still should be fun as there are some quality wrestlers here (particularly poor Kyona, who probably deserves better). While this match may lack in substance it should make up for in style, lets see how it goes.

Stardom Year End GIF 1The match is joined in progress, with Kyona being attacked in the ropes but all three members of Oedo Tai. It eventually gets broken up by her teammates but Oedo Tai clears the ring, all three get drinks in their mouth but Kyona gets an umbrella to block it when they try to spit the drinks at her. Kyona hammers on Jamie, she goes off the ropes and the two collide with both staying up. They both try to lariat each other over with Jamie winning the battle, she goes off the ropes but Kyona does as well and knocks down Jamie with a lariat of her own. Both wrestlers crawl to their own corners to tag in Yama-san and Natsu, Natsu boots Yama-san back a few times but Yama-san doesn’t go down and thrusts her in the throat. Running senton by Yama-san and she tags in Ruaka. Shoulderblocks by Ruaka to Natsu, she throws her into the corner but Natsu reverses it and hits a back elbow. Bronco Buster by Natsu, Martina comes in and she hits a Bronco Buster on Ruaka as well at the same time. They stay in position as Jamie comes in the ring to join them, but Kyona cuts her off with a dropkick before she can join the Bronco Buster party. Codebreaker by Martina to Ruaka, and Natsu delivers a brainbuster hold for the three count! Oedo Tai wins the match.

Beyond Natsu’s obsession with rubbing her crotch in the faces of children, there wasn’t a whole lot to this one. The clipping didn’t help of course as we only saw a few minutes, which mostly was Oedo Tai antics. I enjoy Oedo Tai and for where this was on the card, a more playful match is certainly fine, just not enough shown here to get excited about.

Queen's Quest vs. STARS
(c) AZM, Watanabe, and Hayashishita vs. Kashima, Starlight Kid, and Nakano
Artist of Stardom Championship

Hopefully this match gets more time. Queen’s Quest won the Artist of Stardom Championship last month from Oedo Tai, and this is their first defense of the titles. The STARS team is very qualified for this challenge even if it is the B Team, as all are former champions of some sort in Stardom. While this is a rare undercard title match, anytime you have these six in the same ring the action should be pretty solid.

AZM and Starlight Kid begin the match, they go into a quick exchange with Starlight Kid dropkicking AZM at the end of it. Tam and Saki come in the ring and all three triple team AZM, with a triple dropkick as the final move. Footstomp by Starlight Kid, and she covers AZM for two. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes but Utami runs in and dropkicks her, Momo comes in too and they all connect with running strikes on Starlight Kid in the corner. Cover by AZM, but it gets a two count. AZM goes up to the top turnbuckle but Starlight Kid avoids the diving footstomp, Tiger Feint Kick by Starlight Kid on AZM and Tam plants AZM with a German Suplex Hold. Cover by Starlight Kid, but it gets broken up. She picks up AZM but AZM blocks the Yoshi Tonic attempt, Starlight Kid reverses the flying armbar and the two trade flash pins. Dropkick by Starlight Kid, she goes up to the top turnbuckle and delivers the swivel body press for a two count. Head kick by AZM, she goes up top and hits the diving footstomp for two. Starlight Kid is up quickly but AZM kicks her in the head, she goes for a vertical suplex but Starlight Kid reverses it into one of her own. Both wrestlers slowly crawl to the corners before tagging in Momo and Saki, kick by Saki but Momo throws her into the corner.

Stardom Year End GIF 2Saki jumps up on the second turnbuckle and kicks Momo as she charges in, she rolls Momo to the mat but Utami and AZM come in to help. Saki hits a double face crusher on them while also dropkicking Momo, Starlight Kid and Tam clear the ring before diving off the top turnbuckle to the floor onto their opponents. Back in the ring, diving crossbody by Saki to Momo and she goes back up top, this time hitting a diving footstomp for two. Saki picks up Momo but Momo kicks her in the head, crossface chickenwing by Momo but Saki blocks the suplex attempt and cradles Momo for two. Saki slaps Momo and goes off the ropes, but AZM kicks her from the apron. Utami runs in and hits an Argentine slam on Saki, Somato by Momo but Saki kicks out of the pin. AZM and Utami both get back in the ring and all three dropkick Saki, Momo picks up Saki and goes for the B Driver, but Saki blocks it and cradles Momo for two. Starlight Kid and Tam both get in the ring to help but Utami lariats both of them, she picks up Saki and hits a release German suplex. Momo grabs Saki and delivers the Peach Sunrise, and she picks up the three count! Queen’s Quest retains the championship.

A little clipped but this was a fun match. Starting off with a long AZM and Starlight Kid segment was smart as they have great chemistry, although I am surprised how long it lasted since it ate up a good portion of a six wrestler match. As tends to be the case in these matches, Utami didn’t do much (at least not in what we saw) but she looked great with what she did do, and everyone held up their own end. It didn’t have the feel of a title match just do the length/where it was on the card, but a solid midcard six wrestler tag match nonetheless.

Hazuki vs. Natsuko Tora
Hazuki vs. Natsuko Tora
Retirement Match

And just as quick as Hazuki returned to Stardom, she is leaving again, this time a bit more officially. After a brief hiatus, Hazuki made a sudden comeback to Stardom in November of 2016, joining Io Shirai in her new faction Queen’s Quest. Under Io’s tutelage, Hazuki moved up the card until joining Oedo Tai in 2018, which felt like a great fit for her and she continued to grow as she wrestled with/got further training by her friend Kagetsu. After a great 2019, Hazuki announced in November that she was retiring, with a full ceremony this time, at the last event of the year. So here we are, at Hazuki’s Retirement Match. She is against her stablemate Natsuko Tora, which doesn’t feel like the biggest match they could have done but if she wanted to give the ‘rub’ to someone, the less experienced (but older) Natsuko may have been the best pick. Retirement matches are generally more about emotion than great in-ring work, and I expect the same will be true here.

Stardom Year End GIF 3They immediately get into it as they both go off the ropes, Hazuki gets the last move with the hurricanrana but Natsuko charges right back in. Hazuki tosses around Natsuko by her hair before throwing Natsuko against the ropes, facewashes by Hazuki and she delivers a running boot. Hazuki gives her some more facewashes and another running boot and catapults Natsuko into the second rope. Cover by Hazuki, but it gets a two count. Brainbuster by Hazuki, she covers Natsuko but that gets a two as well. Hazuki picks up Natsuko but Natsuko pushes her off, Hazuki boots Natsuko into the corner but Hazuki avoids her charge and other members of Oedo Tai come in to connect with running strikes in the corner. Codebreaker by Martina, Natsuko picks up Hazuki and hits a Samoan Drop for a two count. Natsuko picks up Hazuki and delivers a swinging side slam, but again Hazuki gets a shoulder up. Natsuko goes off the ropes and knocks down Hazuki with a lariat, she goes for another swinging slide slam but Hazuki blocks it and applies La Magistral for a two count. Hazuki boots Natsuko in the head, she goes off the ropes but Natsuko does too and delivers a spear. Another spear by Natsuko, she slams Hazuki in front of the corner and goes up top. Diving leg drop by Natsuko, and she covers Hazuki for the three count! Natsuko Tora is the winner.

Hazuki Stardom Retirement

Next came Hazuki’s Retirement Ceremony, with Hazuki giving her farewell speech. We end with the bell count and streamers, before Hazuki is carried out of the ring for the last time in Stardom.

I had heard this match wasn’t great, so Samurai TV clipping it down may have been the best way to honor Hazuki’s final match. Natsuko can be a little awkward sometimes in her movements and transitions, but that wasn’t an issue here as with what they showed (less than half the match) everything was pretty smooth. I assume we missed a nice chunk of Hazuki offense as this ended up being almost a squash as it was presented, but it makes sense to focus on the wrestler staying in the promotion and not the one leaving it since Hazuki was going to get extra face time in the post-match. I wouldn’t consider this a great in-ring way to end Hazuki’s career, but her match against Kagetsu the week prior acted more as her in-ring farewell while this was more about the ceremony itself. I don’t know if we will ever see Hazuki again in the ring, but she was a lot of fun to watch and she will certainly be missed.

Hana Kimura vs. Giulia
Hana Kimura vs. Giulia

Sandwiched between retirement matches and title matches, we have a grudge match. As soon as Giulia announced she was joining Stardom, Hana Kimura seemed to take some offense to it and the two have been jawing and pulling at each other’s hair since then. Hana likely feels threatened as both are very attractive and don’t mind letting you know about it, and the two have a lot of similarities as their careers are at about the same place. I’m not sure if they are going for a ‘generational’ type feud with these two or if its a quick program just to introduce Giulia to a new set of fans, but Giulia has had some chemistry issues since joining Stardom so I hope those have been taken care of before such a big match.

They immediately get into it after the bell rings as they throw elbows back and forth, Hana gets the better of it as she keeps hammering Giulia on the mat and goes for a cross armbreaker, but Giulia blocks it. Giulia gets in the mount position and goes for a cross armbreaker of her own, but Hana gets to the ropes to force the break. They both return to their feet and Hana spits on Giulia, Giulia goes for a slap but Hana ducks it and hits a slap of her own. Giulia kicks Hana and throws her out of the ring, she goes out after her and throws Hana into the chairs at ringside. Giulia takes Hana up into the bleachers and slams her into the wall, she brings her back to ringside and throws her into the crowd again. Giulia takes Hana up onto the stage and puts her in the table, but Hana slides off of it to escape. Giulia returns to the ring with Hana slowly following, but Giulia immediately kicks Hana back out and slams Hana on the floor. Giulia gets a running start at Hana but Hana has grabbed a chair and she hits Giulia with it. Hana returns to the ring and waits for Giulia, she boots her in the head after she gets back in but Giulia kicks her back and hits a missile dropkick for two. Giulia picks up Hana but Hana pushes her off, neckbreaker by Giulia and she covers Hana for two. STF by Giulia but Hana wiggles to the ropes and forces a break. Giulia goes off the ropes but Hana catches her with a dropkick, heel drop by Hana and she deliver a delayed vertical suplex for a two count.

Stardom Year End GIF 4Hana boots at Giulia’s head but Giulia just gets mad and slaps her, Hana chokes Giulia but Giulia chokes her back. Headbutt by Hana but Giulia returns fire and both wrestlers end up on the mat. They both get up and go back to trading shots, Hana boots Giulia repeatedly against the ropes and they both hit running boots. Giulia knocks Hana to the mat, Hana quickly gets back up but Giulia puts her in the Stealth Viper. Hana gets to the ropes to force the break, Giulia picks her up and goes for the Glorious Buster, but Hana slides off her back and applies the Ground Manjikatame. Hana reverts it into an armbar but Giulia gets the break, Hana goes off the ropes and boots Giulia. Hana goes up top and delivers a missile dropkick, Hana goes for a package piledriver but Giulia gets away and applies a small package for two. Glorious Buster by Giulia, but Hana reverses her cover into one of her own for two. Back up, headbutt by Hana and she puts Giulia in the Ground Manjikatame, but Giulia gets to the ropes. Package Piledriver attempt by Hana but its blocked again, Glorious Driver by Giulia and she covers Hana, but Hana is too close to the ropes and gets a foot on one to stop the pin. STF by Giulia and she switches it into the Stealth Viper, but the bell rings as time has expired. The match is a Draw.

Even though these two may not have the best chemistry yet, the effort was certainly there. They wrestled this as a hateful brawl even though it was their first match against each other ever, which is a tough feat. So the crowd wasn’t completely convinced but the work was solid and the last five minutes in particular were really good. I could have done without the crowd brawling which I think was mostly done to get it up to the time limit, since its not their strong suit, but once they got into the ring everything was much smoother. A good match with a hot end stretch, once they wrestle a bit more against each other I am sure they will have a great match down the line.  Mildly Recommended

Arisa Hoshiki vs. Konami
(c) Arisa Hoshiki vs. Konami
Wonder of Stardom Championship

Arisa won the Wonder of Stardom Championship back in May of 2019 from Momo Watanabe and has been a very active champion, as this is already her eighth defense of the title. Over that time she has wins over Tam Nakano, Hazuki, Jungle Kyona, Jamie Hayter, and Kagetsu so she has not been taking the easy path as she maintains the gold. She is challenged here by Tokyo Cyber Squad member Konami, who has had tag and trio title success in Stardom but has yet to win a singles title. On Stardom’s biggest stage of the year, Konami gets the chance to finally hold a championship all on her own, but Arisa has shown to be a tough wrestler to take down.

Arisa and Konami circle each other to start as they look for early leverage, kicks to the leg by Arisa but Konami catches one and kicks Arisa back. Arisa goes off the ropes but Konami kicks her in the stomach, dropkick to the head by Konami and she covers Arisa for two. Konami picks up Arisa but Arisa connects with a strike combination, she charges Konami but Konami plants her with a release German suplex. Buzzsaw Kick by Konami, and Arisa rolls out of the ring to try to regain her senses. Konami goes out after her and hits a German suplex on the floor, she applies a Triangle Lancer while Arisa tries to tap out, but since they are outside of the ring it doesn’t count. Konami eventually lets go on her own and waits in the ring for Arisa, Arisa eventually rolls in and Konami goes for a tombstone piledriver, but Arisa blocks it. Konami goes off the ropes but Arisa puts her in a sleeper hold, Konami gets out of it and applies a sleeper hold of her own. Arisa snapmares out of it and kicks Konami in the back, running knee by Arisa and she hits a double knee strike in the corner. Reverse double kneedrop by Arisa, and she covers Konami for two. Arisa picks up Konami and she delivers a jumping kick, she waits for Konami to get up but when she charges Konami she is put in an armbar.

Stardom Year End GIF 5Double armbar by Konami, Arisa struggles in the hold but eventually gets a foot on the ropes to force the break. Konami goes off the ropes and delivers a sliding kick to Arisa, she picks up Arisa but Arisa pushes her off. Konami goes for the Triangle Lancer but Arisa blocks it and hits a quick cutter. Head kick by Arisa, and both wrestlers are down on the mat. They slowly get up, jumping knee by Arisa and she hits a second one. She finishes Konami off with a head kick, cover by Arisa but Konami gets a shoulder up. Arisa goes up top and nails the 1399, she picks up Konami but Konami ducks the Brazilian Kick. Arisa kicks her in the head anyway, she goes to the top turnbuckle but Konami recovers and joins her. Konami suplexes Arisa back to the mat, she picks up Arisa and delivers another suplex. Buzzsaw Kick by Konami, she covers Arisa but it gets two. Hammerlock slam by Konami and she applies a keylock, she switches it to an armbar but Arisa gets a foot on the ropes for the break. Konami stomps at Arisa, she charges her but Arisa moves and kicks Konami in the back of the head. Both wrestlers are slow to get up, Konami goes for the Triangle Lancer but Arisa rolls through it and hits a jumping knee. Shining Star Cutter by Arisa, she picks up Konami and nails the Brazilian Kick. Shining Impact by Arisa, and she covers Konami for the three count! Arisa Hoshiki wins and retains the championship.

This was pretty fantastic. Konami has been ready for a match like this for awhile, Stardom doesn’t give her a lot of chances but whenever they do she delivers. Arisa’s slow rise has been a lot of fun to watch in 2019, as she started slow as she transitioned back to being a full time wrestler but now really has her timing down and keeps adding to her move repertoire so that her matches don’t feel repetitive. Since they have the same style, they both stayed on the same page and the transitions worked well with only the Shining Star Cutter looking a bit out of place (which is a common issue with that move regardless who is doing it). A great strike and submission battle between these two, hopefully Konami will finally get her first singles title in 2020 as she is ready.  Highly Recommended

Mayu Iwatani vs. Kagetsu
(c) Mayu Iwatani vs. Kagetsu
World of Stardom Championship

Time for the main event! It feels like Mayu and Kagetsu have been feuding forever, and they have – their first singles match was back in 2016 over the High Speed Championship and they have had many matches against each other since. This is their first singles match against each other in Stardom this year, however, as Stardom is pretty good about keeping their feuding stars apart so that the pairing doesn’t get stale. Mayu won the World of Stardom Championship from Bea Priestley on November 4th, and this is her first defense of the title. Mayu was recently given the Tokyo Sports Women’s Award for top Joshi Wrestler, so she has that on her shoulders as well as defending her title against her #1 nemesis on Stardom’s big finale for 2019.

They shake hands to start and Mayu even gives Kagetsu a smile, perhaps hinting at the announcement that would come later from Kagetsu. They begin with trading wristlocks and headlocks but they reach a stalemate, Kagetsu goes off the ropes and Mayu drops down, but Kagetsu kicks Mayu in the back. Armdrag by Mayu, they both go off the ropes and Mayu ends up in the corner. Mayu kicks back Kagetsu and hits an armdrag, dropkick by Mayu and Kagetsu rolls out of the ring to re-group. Mayu fakes a dive but flips off Kagetsu instead, Kagetsu tries to get back in the ring but Mayu kicks her back out. Mayu goes do to a tope suicida but Kagetsu spits water in her face, Kagetsu quickly gets back in the ring and hits a tope suicida of her own. She follows up with another one before sliding Mayu back in, but Kagetsu promptly returns Mayu to the floor and hits a third tope suicida. Kagetsu carries Mayu up into the bleachers and slams her onto the stands, she climbs up the wall onto a ledge and jumps down on Mayu with a double footstomp (shades of Kyoko Kimura, but not quite as high). Kagetsu walks Mayu back to the ring, strike exchange by Kagetsu and she hits the Ebisu Drop for two. Kagetsu picks up Mayu and drops her with a chokeslam, cover by Kagetsu but it gets a two count. Kagetsu applies a keylock, but Mayu gets into the ropes for the break. Kagetsu goes up to the top turnbuckle but Mayu recovers and joins her, Frankensteiner by Mayu and she hits a footstomp off the second turnbuckle. Mayu goes up top again and hits the diving body press, cover by Mayu but it gets two.

Stardom Year End GIF 6Mayu goes up top yet again and calls for the moonsault, but Kagetsu rolls out of the way of it and plants Mayu with a running knee. Kagetsu picks up Mayu and puts her on the top turnbuckle, head kick by Kagetsu and she delivers an Avalanche Ebisu Drop for a nearfall. Kagetsu goes up top but Mayu slaps her before she can jump off, she gets Kagetsu on her shoulders and nails the Running Three! Mayu positions Kagetsu and goes up top but again she misses the moonsault, Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu and she hits the Oedo Coaster, but Mayu barely gets a shoulder up on the cover. Kagetsu gets Mayu on her shoulders but Mayu gets off with a reverse hurricanrana, Dodonpa by Mayu but it gets two. Dragon Suplex Hold by Mayu, but that gets a two count as well. Mayu goes up top and this time she hits the moonsault, but Kagetsu kicks out at one. Mayu drags up Kagetsu but Kagetsu wiggles out of the dragon suplex, she pulls down the referee and spits Blue Mist in Mayu’s face. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu, she goes up top and nails the Oedo Coaster before dropping her with a Death Valley Bomb, but Mayu barely kicks out. Kagetsu gets Mayu up again but Mayu slides off and delivers her Dragon Suplex Hold for a two count. Mayu tombstones Kagetsu in front of the corner, she goes up top one final time and nails the moonsault for the three count! Mayu Iwatani wins and retains the championship.

To explain what I alluded to at the top, Kagetsu announced soon after the match that she was retiring soon and leaving Stardom in January, so this likely will be the last ever singles match between Kagetsu and Mayu. The end of an era. And they certainly wrestled like it, since both were kicking out of each other’s finishers like there was no tomorrow and the diving footstomp in the crowd was a sick exclamation point. I don’t mind the finisher kickouts since it was mutual, and they’ve wrestled so many times it is logical it would take a little something extra to put one down for the three count. These two are so fluid and smooth, as you’d expect by now, and the blood on Mayu’s face showed they weren’t exactly taking it easy on each other. Hard hitting and exciting from start to finish, about all you could ask for from a main event title match. Another must-watch on the show and a fitting conclusion to Stardom’s year.  Highly Recommended

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Stardom Goddess Of Stars 2019 on 12/14/19 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-goddess-stars-december-14-2019-review/ Thu, 02 Jan 2020 17:13:57 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=14699 Kagetsu vs. Hazuki in their last singles match!

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Stardom Goddess of Stars #5 Poster

Event: Stardom Goddess Of Stars 2019
Date: December 14th, 2019
Location: Yokohama Radiant Hall in Yokohama, Japan
Announced Attendance: 365

While in the ideal world I’d like to catch up on all the Stardom I have missed, realistically that isn’t going to happen. So since I didn’t want to miss out on Hazuki’s last run before retiring, we will pick up at their big show from a few weeks ago, which was part of the Stardom Goddess of Stars tour. This is a pretty full card for a non-Korakuen Hall show, with seven matches and three singles matches. Plus, the main event brings us a tag title challenge, with Riho returning to Stardom to team with the young Starlight Kid. Here is the full card:

As this aired on Stardom World, all matches will be shown in full. The wrestlers on the event have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

3838 Tag & Itsuki Hoshino vs. Rina & Tokyo Cyber Squad
Rina, Hina, and Ruaka vs. Saya Iida, Saya Kamitani, and Itsuki Hoshino

The show kicks off with the young ones, as the rookies and children collide. Ruaka is the veteran of the bunch but she is only 15, so I am expecting rookie Saya Kamitani to control more of the match since at least she is an adult and the promotion seems to see a lot of potential in here. This is more about gaining experience than anything else, but I haven’t gotten a chance to see the newest rookie Hoshino yet so hopefully she impresses.

Saya Iida, Saya Kamitani, and Itsuki Hoshino vs. Rina, Ruaka, and HinaRuaka and Itsuki start the match, elbows by Itsuki but Ruaka shoulderblocks her to the mat. She tags in Rina, Rina tosses Itsuki down by the hair a few times and stomps her in the corner. Hina is tagged in, scoop slam by Hina and she hits mounted elbows on Itsuki. Iida tries to help but Hina drop toeholds her onto Itsuki, the same happens to Kamitani before Hina jumps on top of the pile. We get back to just one vs. one as Hina trades elbows with Itsuki, Itsuki goes off the ropes but Hina hits a judo toss for two. Hina goes for a scoop slam but Itsuki reverses it into a small package, dropkick by Itsuki and she tags in Iida. Chops by Iida in the corner, Ruaka and Rina both come in to help but Iida throws Rina into Ruaka and then dropkicks Ruaka out of the ring. Iida clubs Hina to the mat, cover by Iida but it gets two. Iida goes off the ropes but Hina catches her with a judo toss and tags in Rina. Iida dropkicks Rina and tags Kamitani, dropkick by Kamitani and she puts Rina in the Muta Lock. She lets go after a moment and applies a single leg crab hold, but Hina breaks it up. Ruaka and Iida both run in but are taken care of, Rina goes to Kamitani but Kamitani connects with a dropkick. Another dropkick by Kamitani and she covers Rina for two. Scoop slam attempt by Kamitani but Rina blocks it and tosses Kamitani to the mat. STO by Rina, and she covers Kamitani for two. Ruaka returns as Kamitani is thrown into the corner, dropkick by Rina and Ruaka boots Kamitani in the chest. Cover by Rina, but it gets a two count. Rina picks up Kamitani and applies a modified Octopus Hold, but Iida breaks it up. Rina and company are all hit with dropkicks, handstand into a kneedrop by Kamitani to Rina and she nails the running Shooting Star Press for the three count! Saya Iida, Saya Kamitani, and Itsuki Hoshino are the winners.

I wouldn’t consider this the smoothest match as there were some miscommunications and awkward moments, that’s one of the common issues when you have a rookie match without a veteran in it to tie things together. Some of the wrestlers looked ok (for rookies/children anyway) and its hard to complain too much about a six minute match, but probably not a match structure that put them in the best position to excel. Not actively bad, just rough around the edges.

Oedo Tai vs. Queen's Quest
AZM, Priestley, Onozaki, and Watanabe vs. Jamie Hayter, Martina, Tora, and Sumire

Time for a faction battle, pitting Queen’s Quest vs. Oedo Tai! This is the classic “everyone not already in a match” faction battle, as it ranges from top of the card wrestlers to midcard, with no real storylines going on aside from the fact they are opposing squads. The Queen’s Quest team is certainly more stacked, with the former World of Stardom (Bea Priestley) and Wonder of Stardom (Momo Watanabe) champions, but they also have Leo so it evens out a bit. Nothing really at stake but ideally it’ll still be a fun and chaotic match.

Oedo Tai attacks before the bell rings as why wouldn’t they, Natsu ends up alone with Leo in the ring while everyone else battles outside of it. Natsu applies a front necklock while Oedo Tai controls the action in the crowd, scoop slam by Natsu and she puts Leo in a stretch hold. AZM runs in and breaks it up, Natsuko and Jamie toss AZM out of the ring as Martina comes in as the legal wrestler. Sidewalk Slam by Martina, but AZM breaks up the cover and tries to get Leo back to her corner. She gets cut off, Martina tags in Natsu and Natsu stomps on Leo’s back. Leo fights back with elbows and they trade shots, Natsu gets the better of it and throws Leo into the corner. Bronco Buster by Natsu, Martina comes in the ring but AZM cuts her off with a dropkick. AZM kicks Natsu in the head but again gets stopped from getting Leo back to her corner, Natsuko sets up Leo in the ropes and all of Oedo Tai pose around her. Jamie is tagged in, scoop slam by Jamie and she covers Leo for two. Jamie picks up Leo but Leo elbows her, more elbows by Leo and Bea runs in with an elbow to Jamie as well. Leo finally makes it to her corner and tags in Bea, Martina tries to help but AZM also comes in and and she drops both Jamie and Martina. Double dropkick by Bea and she nails Jamie with a running knee for a two count cover. Bea tags in Momo, Momo goes for a suplex but Jamie blocks it. Momo gets Jamie’s back but Jamie reverses position and hits a side slam onto her knee.

She tags Natsuko, spear by Natsuko to Momo and she delivers a spinning backfist. Natsuko goes off the ropes but Momo kicks her in the head, another head kick by Martina and she goes for the cover, but moves when Natsu runs in to try to interrupt it. Martina also tries to help but fails, Natsuko runs in but she lariats Natsuko by accident. Running kick by Momo to Natsuko, she tags in Leo and Leo hits a jumping elbow in the corner followed by a cutter. A second cutter by Leo and she covers Natsuko for a two count. Elbows by Leo but Natsuko grabs her from behind and stomps on her. Natsuko goes off the ropes but Bea catches her with a jumping knee, Somato by Momo to Natsuko before Leo covers her, but the pin is broken up. Leo tries to throw Natsuko in the corner but Natsuko reverses it, stomp by Leo and she hits a scoop slam for two. Leo picks up Natsuko and the two trade elbows, Leo elbows Natsuko into the corner but Natsuko avoids her charge and the rest of Oedo Tai all run into elbow her in the corner. Boot by Natsu before Martina hits a Codebreaker on Leo, Samoan Drop by Natsuko but Momo breaks up the cover. Natsuko picks up Leo but Leo reverses the slam attempt into a small package for two. Leo goes off the ropes but Natsuko connects with an elbow, rolling fireman’s carry slam by Natsuko and she goes up top, nailing the diving body press. Cover, and she picks up the three count! Oedo Tai wins the match.

Reddit will get mad at me but the main person holding this match back was Leo. Leo was part of the only real mistake of the match and a few smaller miscommunications, she is just a step behind everyone else in the match. Plus, slow beatdowns of rookies/young wrestlers isn’t incredibly entertaining and that was the bulk of the match. When the other wrestlers were the focus the match was pretty fun, and Bea looked great, but some wrestlers got to do virtually nothing just due to the time length and the structure of the match. Some good offense here and there, but overall it was lacking intrigue and cohesion.

Giulia vs. Saki Kashima
Giulia vs. Saki Kashima

Finally the moment I have been waiting for, as I finally get to see Giulia in Stardom. Since I watch more promotions than just Stardom I am already very familar with Giulia and really liked her in Ice Ribbon, with her match against Maya Yukihi back in May being one of my favorite Joshi matches of the year. While some fans didn’t like the way she left Ice Ribbon for Stardom, its not something I really concern myself with, so I’m excited to see her getting more recognition. This is a good match for her as Saki Kashima is respected, but not a highly ranked wrestler, so she should be able to show off and pick up a win which she needs to establish her rank in Stardom.

Giulia offers her hand to Saki for a nice handshake, but attacks her instead as they get right to it. Giulia goes for the Glorious Buster but Saki slides out of it, and the two reach an early stalemate. They go into a knucklelock and trade wristlocks, Giulia gets Saki to the mat and applies a crossface which she switches to a headlock when Saki retains her footing. Saki reverses that into a headscissors but Giulia quickly gets out of it, Saki returns to her feet and elbows Giulia against the ropes. Giulia returns fire as they trade blows, Saki throws down Giulia by the hair and goes off the ropes, booting Giulia in the head. Saki goes off the ropes again but this time Giulia catches her with a face crusher, Giulia picks up Saki and throws her into the corner. Giulia knees Saki before dragging her back to her feet, snapmare by Giulia and she applies a reverse chinlock, but Saki wiggles to the ropes for the break.

Giulia throws Saki into the corner but Saki jumps up on the turnbuckle and hits a flying headscissors, boot by Saki and she covers Giulia for two. Saki picks up Giulia and they trade elbows, big boot by Giulia but Saki comes back with a boot of her own and covers Giulia for a two count. Double underhook by Saki but Giulia back bodydrops out of it, both go for quick cradles on the mat but have no luck. Giulia catches Saki’s leg and quickly puts her in the STF, however Saki gets to the ropes for a break. Giulia goes for an elbow but Saki avoids it and delivers a double underhook facebuster for two. Both wrestlers go for their finishers but their opponent slides away, Giulia trips Saki and puts her back in the STF. Saki manages to get a hand on the ropes to get the break, Giulia goes up to the top turnbuckle and nails the missile dropkick but Saki reverses her cover into one of her own for two. Giulia is up first and boots Saki, vertical suplex slam by Giulia but Saki barely kicks out of the cover. Giulia picks up Saki and delivers the Glorious Buster, and she picks up the three count! Giulia wins the match.

While I am happy to see Giulia again and this match was fundamentally solid, it had its sloppy moments and took some time to get going. I’m fine with matches starting slow and on the mat, but in a shorter match it just didn’t leave them a lot of time left once things heated up. The last few minutes were good but even then there were a few spots that didn’t look as smooth as would be ideal. It may take some time for Giulia to get chemistry with the Stardom wrestlers, but the effort was clear and Giulia looked strong so that’s a plus. Some potential for sure, just needs some smoothing out.


Andras Miyagi vs. Utami Hayashishita

We jump to another random singles match, with Oedo Tai vs. Queen’s Quest. Utami was out from mid-September to mid-November and is still working on finding her place back in Stardom, especially with all the changes going on. But she still holds three titles (none of which are being defended here) so she appears to still be part of Stardom’s plans going forward. Andras also appears lost in the shuffle, she briefly held the trios title but other than that she hasn’t done much of note since switching to Stardom earlier this year. Both will get a chance here to assert themselves however in this mid-card match with little to no long term ramifications.

Utami German SuplexThey lock knuckles to start, Utami applies a wristlock but Andras reverses it. They end up on the mat as Andras applies a kneelock, but Utami kicks her off and they return to their feet. They tie-up, Utami pushes Andras into the ropes but Andras reverses positions with her before hitting a hard elbow. Utami throws Andras to the mat but Andras hits an armdrag, short armbar by Andras into a cross armbreaker but Utami gets to the ropes for the break. Andras kicks Utami and goes back to the arm as she twists it on the mat before stomping on it. Andras kicks at Utami, she picks her up and throws her into the corner, but Utami avoids her charge. Dropkick by Utami, she grabs Andras by the waist but Andras gets away and puts Utami in a modified armbar. Utami gets out of it, they trade waistlocks until Utami puts Andras in a sleeper. Andras slides out of it but Utami re-applies the hold, she takes Andras to the mat while maintaining the sleeper until Andras seems pretty out of it. Utami picks up Andras and nails a German suplex hold, and she picks up the three count! Utami Hayashishita wins the match.

So this match just screamed “house show mid-card time filler.” I think Utami only had three successful moves in the match total as most of it was arm work by Andras. And the arm work was done well but in this short of a match there was just no payoff, as she ended up not really hitting a single move of note either. Also, Utami using a “put someone to sleep, then hit a suplex to win” tactic is bizarre since in theory if you put your opponent to sleep you win the match anyway without the extra effort. Pretty much a nothing match, not offensive but not necessary either.

STARS vs. Tokyo Cyber Squad
Arisa Hoshiki, Iwatani, and Nakano vs. Death Yama-san, Hana Kimura, and Zoe Lucas

Faction Wars continue, as now we get the two teams not featured a few matches ago with STARS colliding with Tokyo Cyber Squad. There is some top tier talent here, as Mayu comes in with the World of Stardom Championship and Arisa with the Wonder of Stardom Championship. The deck is definitely stacked towards the STARS team, as Tokyo Cyber Squad’s better wrestlers are in the main event which is why Yama-san and Zoe were elevated up the card. TCS will have an uphill battle to win in this one.

Tam and Yama-san start the match, Yama-san does her wacky bit until Tam kicks her in the back. Armdrag by Yama-san and she trips Tam, but Tam bridges out of the pin and hits a neckbreaker. Mayu and Arisa come in and they triple team Yama-san, ending with a triple dropkick. Cartwheel kneedrop by Tam, and she covers Yama-san for two. Tam goes off the ropes but Hana kicks her from the apron, Yama-san tags in Hana and they both boot Tam. Hana kicks Tam into the corner before tagging in Zoe, Zoe chokes Tam in the corner before stretching her in the ropes. Zoe tags Yama-san, Yama-san throws Tam into the corner but Tam avoids her charge and hits an elbow. Backdrop attempt by Tam but Yama-san blocks it and hits a suplex of her own, she goes off the ropes but Tam catches her with a backdrop suplex and makes the tag to Mayu. Irish whip by Mayu, she rolls Yama-san to the mat before kicking her in the face. Yama-san thrusts Mayu in the neck and applies a stretch hold, but Mayu gets into the ropes for the break. Yama-san tags Hana, Hana charges Mayu and boots her in the side of the head. She hits another boot, cover by Hana but Mayu kicks out.

STARS vs. Tokyo Cyber SquadHana picks up Mayu but Mayu kicks her in the stomach, Mayu goes off the ropes but Hana plants her with a dropkick. Hana goes for a vertical suplex but Mayu blocks it and applies a front necklock, Hana muscles out of the hold and eventually hits her vertical suplex for a two count. Hana goes off the ropes but Mayu catches her with a Sling Blade, both wrestlers roll to their corners as Arisa and Zoe are tagged in. Kicks by Zoe, she goes off the ropes and slams Arisa’s head into the mat for a two count cover. Zoe picks up Arisa and hits a series of elbows, Arisa fires back with a kick as Tam arrives and they both hit Zoe with running strikes. Another kick to the head by Arisa, but the cover is broken up. Arisa picks up Zoe but Zoe ducks the Brazilian Kick as her teammates both run in to help. Split Legdrop by Zoe, but Arisa gets a shoulder up on the cover. Zoe goes off the ropes and delivers a Scissors Kick, but her pin attempt is broken up. Mayu and Tam stay in to take care of Hana and Yama-san, Mayu superkicks Zoe and Arisa nails a jumping knee. Brazilian Kick by Arisa, and she covers Zoe for the three count! Arisa Hoshiki, Mayu Iwatani, and Tam Nakano are the winners.

This match was perfectly fine but nothing special. Its a bit disappointing to see wrestlers like Mayu, Arisa, and Hana in a meaningless eight minute midcard match, but its a combination of this being a small show and Stardom simply being stacked right now so sometimes wrestlers aren’t in the ideal position. I’m not a big fan of Kaori Yoneyama’s shtick, at least not this high on the card, its more a comedy match or opening match gimmick than anything I could take seriously against the promotion’s top wrestlers. A decent enough match for what it was, but utterly forgettable in the grand scheme of things.


Hazuki vs. Kagetsu

I had to sit through a lot of average wrestling to get to this match, the main reason I am watching this show. Hazuki shocked the Joshi world (as much as the Joshi world can be shocked by such things) on November 24th when she announced she would retire at the end of December. Hazuki didn’t have a long career but had a large fan base and had a big year in 2019, so her leaving will at least temporarily leave a hole in Stardom. Kagetsu had become one of her best friends in Stardom as part of Oedo Tai, and as part of her retirement tour they decided to have a match to close their chapter. This is only their second singles match ever against each other, with Kagetsu defeating Hazuki last January. This may get emotional but I still anticipate this being a great match.

The match starts slow as they feel each other out, they trade holds on the mat but eventually reach a stalemate. Back up, Kagetsu takes Hazuki down and gets in the mount, she goes for a choke but Hazuki blocks it and switches into the dominate position. Kagetsu gets back in control with a front necklock, she twists Hazuki into a submission hold but Hazuki gets into the ropes for the break. Kagetsu kicks Hazuki in the chest repeatedly and goes off the ropes, but Hazuki catches her with a dropkick. Hazuki boots Kagetsu while she is against the ropes before connecting with a facewash, sending Kagetsu out of the ring. Hazuki goes off the ropes and sails out with a tope suicida, but Kagetsu moves and Hazuki lands on the rest of Oedo Tai instead. Kagetsu quickly returns to the ring and does a dive of her own, but Hazuki moves this time and again the rest of Oedo Tai takes the brunt of the assault. Hazuki gets another running start and this time lands on Kagetsu when she dives out of the ring (along with everyone else in Oedo Tai again), Hazuki rolls Kagetsu back in but immediately tosses her back out and throws Kagetsu into the chairs at ringside. Hazuki hits Kagetsu with chairs as she walks her around the crowd, they finally return to the ring and Hazuki hits a swandive missile dropkick to Kagetsu’s back. Running boot by Hazuki, she drapes Kagetsu over the second rope and twists on her neck before hitting a full nelson slam onto her knee for a two count. Modified armtrap crossface by Hazuki but Kagetsu gets to the ropes, Hazuki quickly picks her up and slams her in front of the corner. Hazuki goes up top but Kagetsu avoids the senton and delivers a running knee, leaving both hurt on the mat. Kagetsu recovers first and picks up Hazuki, Hazuki elbows her but Kagetsu returns fire and they trade blows.

Kagetsu wins the battle as she elbows Hazuki to the mat, she drags her up but Hazuki elbows her again as the exchange continues. Hazuki goes off the ropes but Kagetsu ducks an elbow and delivers a strike combination, Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu and she covers Hazuki for two. Kagetsu picks up Hazuki and hits the chokeslam, but again Hazuki kicks out of the cover. Kagetsu quickly puts Hazuki in a keylock but Hazuki rolls to the ropes to force the break. Kagetsu positions Hazuki and goes up to the top turnbuckle, but Hazuki recovers before she can jump off and boots her. Hazuki suplexes Kagetsu back into the ring, she sets her up in the corner and delivers a Codebreaker. Hazuki puts Kagetsu on the top turnbuckle and hits another Codebreaker, she goes up top herself this time and nails the diving senton for a two count. Hazuki drags Kagetsu to her feet and drops her with a brainbuster, she puts Kagetsu in the armtrap crossface, she switches it to the Rings of Saturn but Kagetsu gets a foot on the ropes for a break. Hazuki picks up Kagetsu but Kagetsu blocks the suplex attempt and throws Hazuki into the referee. Blue Mist by Kagetsu while the referee isn’t looking, she hits an Ebisu Drop in front of the corner before nailing the Oedo Coaster. She picks up Hazuki and tries to put her on her shoulders, but Hazuki slides off her back and applies La Magistral for two. Hazuki goes off the ropes but Kagetsu kicks her in the head, Death Valley Bomb by Kagetsu and she picks up the three count! Kagetsu wins!

I wish this match had been Hazuki’s retirement match, it would have been a much more fitting end to her career. Even though these two don’t wrestle against each other often, they still have great chemistry from being partners and from training, as this was a pretty flawlessly executed match. They started slow but they slowly ramped up the offense, and even when Hazuki took over with her bigger moves she still went for submissions as well so it wasn’t just non-stop bombs with little meaning. Hazuki’s offense is unique and fun to watch, and as everyone knows I am a mark for the mist so Kagetsu is always entertaining as far as I am concerned. A great match that really flew by and Kagetsu winning in part due to Oedo Tai tactics fit in well, one of the better singles matches of Hazuki’s short career.  Highly Recommended

Jungle Kyona & Konami vs. Riho & Starlight Kid
(c) Jungle Kyona and Konami vs. Riho and Starlight Kid
Goddesses of Stardom Championship

Time for the main event and our lone title match of the evening. Kyona and Konami of Tokyo Cyber Squad won the tag titles on July 15th against Momo and Utami, and they have been somewhat active (by Stardom standards) as this is their third defense. Riho comes into the match as the AEW Women’s Champion and High Speed Champion but here she teams with the young Starlight Kid to try to win her third championship. The team isn’t completely random as they tagged together in the Goddesses of Stardom League, and during the league matches they went to a Draw with the champions so the challenge isn’t out of left field. While it seems unlikely they’d give the often unavailable Riho a second title, this is Stardom so anything is possible.

Kyona starts the match against Starlight Kid, and she immediately knocks the smaller wrestler to the mat. Starlight Kid quickly gets back up and they trade elbows, Kyona delivers a series of hard elbows but Starlight Kid stays up and slaps Kyona in the face. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes and goes for a tilt-a-whirl headscissors, Kyona initially blocks it but Starlight Kid completes the move anyway and hits a dropkick. Riho comes in and they double team Kyona, ending with a double knee to the back and a double dropkick. Footstomp by Starlight Kid, and she covers Kyona for two. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes but Kyona delivers a dropkick, sending Starlight Kid out of the ring. Konami quickly runs in and hits a baseball slide on both Starlight Kid and Riho before Kyona goes to the ropes and does a pescado down onto both of them. Kyona slides Starlight Kid back in and kicks her into the ropes, Konami grabs Starlight Kid from the apron and applies an armbar over the top rope. Kyona tags in Konami, Konami stomps on Starlight Kid before snapmaring her to the mat and kicking her in the back. Kyona returns as legal, she picks up Starlight Kid and applies a backbreaker. Gutbuster by Kyona and she puts Starlight Kid in a single leg crab hold, but Starlight Kid gets to the ropes for the break. Kyona tags Konami, Starlight Kid recovers and elbows Konami before hitting a rebound crossbody off the ropes. Standing moonsault by Starlight Kid, she crawls to her corner and makes the hot tag to Riho. Riho boots Konami and Kyona, she hits a jumping crossbody on Konami but Konami rolls through it. Riho quickly kicks out of the corner and hits a dropkick, armtrap crossface by Riho but Kyona breaks it up. Riho picks up Konami but Konami hits an enzuigiri before tagging in Kyona.

Body Avalanche by Kyona to Riho and she dropkicks her against the ropes, sliding lariat by Kyona and she goes for a powerbomb, but Starlight Kid breaks it up. Kyona hits a double suplex on both of them, Kyona picks up Riho for a powerbomb while Konami goes to the top turnbuckle, but Starlight Kid grabs Konami from the apron. Riho gets out of the powerbomb attempt with a hurricanrana, but she only gets a two. Lariat by Kyona to Riho but Riho comes back with a jumping knee, cover by Riho but again she gets a two count. Riho goes up top but Kyona recovers and joins her, they struggle for position until Riho knocks Kyona into a Tree of Woe position. Double kneedrop by Riho, she goes off the ropes and goes for the Somato, but Kyona moves out of the way and delivers a lariat. Riho tags in Starlight Kid, Starlight Kid prevents Kyona from tagging out before hitting her with a jumping lariat. Tiger Feint Kick attempt by Starlight Kid but Kyona blocks it, Starlight Kid cradles Kyona but it gets a two. Cartwheel powerbomb by Starlight Kid, she picks up Kyona and goes for a crossbody, but Kyona catches her and hits a backbreaker. Kyona tags Konami, sliding kick by Konami to Starlight Kid and she hits a vertical suplex for two. Konami goes for a cross armbreaker, Starlight Kid gets out of it so Konami applies a double armbar instead. Starlight Kid gets to the ropes to force the break, Konami picks her up but Starlight Kid blocks the suplex attempt and Riho runs in with a jumping knee to Kyona.

Capture Suplex Hold by Starlight Kid, but Konami gets a shoulder up. Starlight Kid goes up to the top turnbuckle and nails the Swivel Body Press, but Kyona breaks up the cover. Kyona stays in and elbows Starlight Kid, she swings her around in the sleeper giant swing before letting to so that Konami can put her in the Triangle Lancer. Riho breaks up the hold, Riho and Starlight Kid go off the ropes and both hit spinning headscissors on their opponents. Kyona and Konami fall out of the ring, Starlight Kid and Riho go to opposite corners and dive out of the ring onto them with planchas. Starlight Kid and Konami return to the ring, Konami pushes Starlight Kid off but Starlight Kid blocks the Triangle Lancer and the two trade flash pins. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes and jumps on Konami’s back, but Kyona runs in and lariats her. Sliding lariat attempt by Kyona but she hits Konami by accident, jumping knee by Riho to Konami and Starlight Kid dropkicks Konami in the knee. Somato to the back of the head by Riho, Starlight Kid delivers the Yoshi Tonic to Konami but Kyona breaks up the pin attempt. Starlight Kid positions Konami and goes up to the top turnbuckle, but Kyona grabs her before she can do the moonsault. She holds up Starlight Kid so that Konami can deliver a dropkick as she plants Starlight Kid with a powerbomb, Buzzsaw Kick by Konami but Starlight Kid grabs the bottom rope to break the pin. Konami grabs Starlight Kid and hits a bridging capture suplex, but Riho breaks it up. Kyona takes care of Riho while Konami puts Starlight Kid in the Final Lancer, and Starlight Kid has no choice but to submit! Jungle Kyona and Konami win and retain the championships.

With all the retirements going on, the one that will probably annoy me the most is Starlight Kid’s inevitable exit from wrestling. From all accounts, whoever is under the mask is a very intelligent woman who prioritizes her education over wrestling (or has up to this point), which is great for her but bad for us as she is really really good at wrestling. Everyone in this match is quality but Starlight Kid still managed to jump out of the screen and leave a lasting impression, as she is different from everyone else in Stardom and continues to improve each time I see her. This match is classic Joshi Chaos, with something always happening and not a ton of long term selling. As long as you enjoy Joshi Chaos, which I do, you’ll really enjoy this match. They kept Starlight Kid the focus since Riho is only a part-timer, with the story being if she could finally get a big pinfall over one of her seniors. She couldn’t, but not due to lack of trying as she really met the challenge. Konami and Kyona both seemed fired up as well and everything clicked, for all the action they squeezed into a 16 minute match it never felt out of sync or forced. A fantastic main event, and the last two matches really saved this show from being utterly forgettable.  Highly Recommended

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Stardom World Big Summer In Tokyo on 7/24/19 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-world-big-summer-tokyo-july-24-2019-review/ Sat, 09 Nov 2019 23:23:24 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=13972 Hazuki challenges Hoshiki and Bea battles Momo!

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Stardom World Big Summer In Tokyo

Event: Stardom “World Big Summer In Tokyo”
Date: July 24th, 2019
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 810

We are back to Stardom, as my quest to not miss any of the Korakuen Hall events in 2019 continues even if I am four months behind. I should be caught up by the end of the year. Stardom “World Big Summer In Tokyo” is Stardom’s marquee summer event and we have three titles on the line, including their top two singles titles. Here is the full card:

I am watching the Samurai TV version of the show so some matches may be clipped. All the wrestlers on the show have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

Hina and Leo Onozaki vs. Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire vs. Rina and Ruaka
Hina and Leo Onozaki vs. Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire vs. Rina and Ruaka

Now this is the Stardom opener we have all learned to know and love. Lots of rookie and rookie-like wrestlers here, with Natsuko Tora and Natsu Sumire sticking out like a sore thumb. This match definitely favors the Oedo Tai team, but since the match can end without them even being involved, they aren’t a guaranteed lock to walk out the winners.

The match starts with all six brawling in the ring, Ruaka and Hina work together to get the early advantage but Natsuko slams them both into the corner and Natsu runs in with a Bronco Buster. Natsu picks up Hina and slams her in front of the corner, Ruaka is then stacked on top of her and Natsuko hits a diving bodypress on both of them for a two count. They go to Ruaka but Ruaka elbows them both back, double crossbody by Ruaka and she tags in Rina. Dropkick by Rina, Hina runs in and she hits a judo toss on her sister before tagging in Leo. Octopus Hold by Rina to Leo and she cradles her for a two count. Rina goes for a STO but Leo blocks it, Ruaka boots Leo in the chest and Rina covers her for two. Natsu comes in with her whip and hits everyone with it, Natsuko comes in too and she hits a legdrop on Leo for two. Rina and Ruaka come in and double team Leo, but Leo ducks Ruaka’s crossbody. Cutter by Leo to Rina, and she applies La Magistral for the three count! Leo Onozaki and Hina are the winners!

Not a whole lot to this one, and they didn’t always keep the teams straight. Not that it really mattered, with the loose tag rules and random interference, a structured match was not what they were going for. Too quick to be offensive but also too quick to be memorable, Natsu left an impression as she tends to do but otherwise not much here to get excited about.

Stardom World - Jamie Hayter vs. Saya Iida vs. Utami Hayashishita
Jamie Hayter vs. Saya Iida vs. Utami Hayashishita

Next up with have a rookie match, with a bit of Jamie too for extra measure. Even though Saya and Utami are both rookies, they are on totally different levels as Utami is already a multiple time champion and Saya is still working her way up the card. Jamie Hayter is a UK wrestler that is part of Oedo Tai, she has fit in well in Stardom so hopefully all three are in sync for this quick triple threat.

Utami and Jamie shove each other to start while Saya watches, Saya tries to get involved but is shoved aside as the taller wrestlers want the ring to themselves. They eventually get rid of Saya, Jamie snapmares Utami and kicks her repeatedly in the back. Hard shoulderblock by Utami to Jamie, Saya returns but Utami scoop slams her onto Jamie before covering her for two. Utami picks up Jamie and charges her, but Jamie holds down the top rope and Utami lands on the apron. Jamie slaps her off the apron to the floor, she throws Utami back into the ring and kicks her in the corner. Uppercuts by Jamie to Utami but Utami avoids her charge, Jamie flips Utami out to the apron but Saya runs in and dropkicks Jamie. Another dropkick by Saya but Jamie fires back with a lariat, she goes back to Utami as Utami gets on the top turnbuckle and she joins her.

Saya tries to join in the fun but Jamie kicks her back, Utami pushes Jamie off the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick. Utami goes to cover Jamie but Saya knocks her out of the way and covers Jamie for two. Saya drop toeholds Utami onto Jamie, she bridges over both of them but it gets a two count. Saya throws Jamie and Utami into different corners and dropkicks both of them, she then stacks them into the same corner but Utami catches her with a judo toss. Utami gets Saya up in the backbreaker but Jamie boots Utami in the face, she hits a vertical suplex into the corner on Utami before slamming Saya repeatedly onto her knee. Jamie picks up Saya but Saya sneaks in an inside cradle for two, she goes for a backslide but that gets a two as well. High kick by Jamie to Saya but Saya gets away from her, German suplex by Utami to Jamie and she hits a dropkick on Jamie. Argentine Backbreaker by Utami, Jamie tries to break it up but Utami swings Saya’s legs into her before Saya submits to the submission! Utami Hayashishita is the winner.

I would have loved to see Jamie and Utami go at it one on one but the inclusion of Saya guaranteed that this wasn’t going to be an overly serious match with any long term implications. Saya isn’t a bad wrestler, she has a lot of spunk, but she had no chance of winning and was here just to be the wrestler to take the loss. That being said, the match was pretty well done and all their cute ‘triple threat’ spots went off without a hitch. All three were given a bit of a chance to shine, which is an accomplishment in such a short match, and everything clicked. Perfectly fine for an undercard match, just wish that Utami and Jamie had something more important to do on the show.

Bobbi Tyler, Death Yama-san, Hana Kimura, and Lucas vs. Mayu Iwatani, Saki Kashima, Starlight Kid, and Nakano
Bobbi Tyler, Death Yama-san, Hana Kimura, and Lucas vs. Iwatani, Kashima, Starlight Kid, and Nakano

STARS and Tokyo Cyber Squad collide! These are the top wrestlers from each group that didn’t have a title match on the card, with several big name wrestlers tossed into this faction-based match. Every native wrestler in this match has held a title in 2019 (and Death Yama-san comes into the match with the High Speed Championship), while Bobbi and Zoe are two of Stardom’s top visiting Gaijin talent. Even though this match is on the first half of the card, I still have high expectations for it to be an entertaining affair.

TCS attack before the bell because of course they did, Starlight Kid seems surprised by this and I have no idea why. TCS dominates for a moment as they focus on Starlight Kid, but STARS roars back and all four of them apply submission holds to their opponents. Starlight Kid and Hana stay in as the legal wrestlers as Hana gets to the ropes to break Starlight Kid’s hold, she goes off the ropes but Hana hits a drop toehold. Chinlock by Hana, she lets go after a moment and tosses down Starlight Kid by the mask. Hana tags in Zoe as Starlight Kid is triple teamed in the corner, Zoe snapmares Starlight Kid and sits down on the mat with her so she can stretch her (with Yama-san’s help). Zoe tags in Bobbi while she continues to choke Starlight Kid, Irish whip by Bobbi but Starlight Kid rebounds off the ropes with a crossbody and makes the hot tag to Saki. Bobbi throws Saki into the corner but she rebounds out of it with a bulldog, spinning headscissors by Saki but Bobbi avoids her boot attempt. Zoe comes in the ring but so does Tam, and STARS gets the in-ring advantage. Zoe and Bobbi take back over briefly but are thrown into each other before both eat dropkicks. Saki grabs Bobbi’s arm and snaps it against her foot, she tags in Mayu and Mayu dropkicks Bobbi in the chest. Elbows by Mayu but Bobbi comes back with the reverse STO from the ropes and makes the tag to Hana. Big boot by Hana to Mayu, she goes off the ropes and nails Mayu with a second one. Cover by Hana, but Mayu gets a shoulder up.

Hana picks up Mayu but Mayu blocks the suplex attempt, she goes off the ropes but Zoe grabs her so that Hana can boot Mayu in the face. Bobbi comes in and she helps Zoe toss Mayu to the mat, boot by Hana and she covers Mayu for a close two count. Hana picks up Mayu and puts her in a modified Ground Manjikatame but Mayu is too close to the ropes and forces the break. Hana charges Mayu in the corner but Mayu moves out of the way and kicks Hana in the face. Hana comes back with a vertical suplex, she picks up Mayu and elbows her, but Saki runs in and boots Hana in the chest. Tiger Feint Kick by Starlight Kid and Tam hits a backdrop suplex on Hana, Mayu has recovered and she goes up to the top turnbuckle, nailing the Frog Splash but Yama-san breaks up the cover. Mayu goes for a dragon suplex but Hana blocks it, Zoe kicks Mayu but Starlight Kid runs in and dropkicks Zoe. Both teams trade moves until everyone is down, Mayu and Hana are left alone in the ring and they trade elbows. Hana wins the battle and boots Mayu, but Mayu fires back with a superkick and both wrestlers are down again. They crawl to their respective corners to tag in Starlight Kid and Yama-san, Irish whip by Yama-san but Starlight Kid spins around her and the two trade flash pins. Back up, dropkick by Starlight Kid and they trade cradles until Starlight Kid holds down Yama-san for the three count! STARS win the match.

A fun mid-card tag match. As I mentioned above, a lot of quality wrestlers were jammed into this match so the action was really solid, with Hana being the main focus but others getting in their shots. Kaori Yoneyama and Tam Nakano mostly kept to the background as its hard for everyone to get in there in a ten minute eight woman tag, but not much one can do about that. I am not sure if Bobbi or Jamie is my favorite Gaijin in Stardom at the moment but I like them both a lot and hope they stay with the promotion for a long time to come, Bobbi fit in really well here. A fast paced entertaining match. Mildly Recommended

Stardom World Big Summer - Jungle Kyona and Konami vs. Andras Miyagi and Kagetsu
(c) Jungle Kyona and Konami vs. Andras Miyagi and Kagetsu
Goddesses of Stardom Championship

We have reached the championship portion of the evening. The Tokyo Cyber Squad team of Jungle Kyona and Konami just won the tag titles on July 15th, so needless to say this is their first defense of the title. They go up against the top two wrestlers in Oedo Tai; Kagetsu and Andras actually come into the match as two-thirds of the Artist of Stardom Championship but they are not satisfied and want more gold. While card placement implies they may not be going all out with two more title matches to go, this still should be a good one.

Andras and Kyona start off and immediately try to knock each other over, with Kyona getting the best of the duel. Kyona shoulderblocks Andras over again, she goes off the ropes but Kagetsu grabs her from the floor and pulls her out of the ring as things immediately break down. Andras and Kyona put on some hand sanitizer before getting into a Test of Strength, but Kyona breaks away and rubs it into Andras’ eyes. Andras gets back in control as they return to the ring, both wrestlers tag out as Konami and Kagetsu start trading kicks. Kagetsu catches one and hits a dragon screw, enzuigiri by Kagetsu and she tags in Andras. Elbows by Andras and she dropkicks Konami in the back of the head, Kyona runs in to help and Andras is double teamed as Kyona delivers the lariat. Kyona leaves the ring so that Konami can tag her in, snapmare by Kyona and she hits a sliding lariat for a two count. Kyona picks up Andras and hits a scoop slam, she goes up top but Andras avoids the diving body press and Kagetsu kicks her in the face. Konami comes in but Andras boots her back out, Oedo Tai kick Kyona and Andras hits a suplex. Ebisu Drop by Kagetsu, Andras follows with the Swanton Bomb but Konami breaks up the cover. They toss Andras into the ropes but Kagetsu hits a double springboard dropkick, Kyona and Konami fall out of the ring but they hit Oedo Tai with chairs when they go to do a dive. Release German by Konami to Andras, Kyona quickly goes to the top turnbuckle and nails the diving body press. Hammer Throw Powerbomb by Kyona, and she picks up the three count! Tokyo Cyber Squad win and retain the championship.

This match was clipped to hell (about 50%), which is surprising for a title match since there were some more… lowly matches on the show they could have cut up. I guess they were just making sure the next two matches got the time they need. The match started a little goofy but got good after that, Kagetsu is so great that she shines through in every match she is in, even heavily clipped ones. Solid action for sure but its hard for me to recommend a match that so much is cut out of, just too incomplete.

Stardom World Big Summer - Arisa Hoshiki vs. Hazuki
(c) Arisa Hoshiki vs. Hazuki

Wonder of Stardom Championship

Arisa Hoshiki has really taken Stardom by storm in 2019. After a long absence from wrestling, Arisa returned to Stardom in late 2018 and in just eight months since then she won the Cinderella Tournament, defeated Mayu Iwatani for the Wonder of Stardom Championship, and is now on her third defense of the title. Hazuki has had a great year also, as she held the High Speed Championship from December 2018 to July 2019 (she lost it four days before this show). Even though Arisa is the senior wrestler in age, she is not in experience so this should be a close and competitive match.

They tie-up to start and get into a Test of Strength, Arisa tosses Hazuki to the mat and hops on top of her but Hazuki quickly reverses places with her as they jockey on the mat for position. Snapmare by Arisa and she kicks Hazuki in the back, she goes off the ropes but Hazuki trips her and drags her out of the ring. Hazuki tosses Arisa into the chairs at ringside, she brings her up into the bleachers and slams Arisa’s head into the column a few times. Hazuki brings Arisa back into the ring but immediately throws her back out of it and throws her into the chairs again. Hazuki slams Arisa into the ring post before scoop slamming her on the floor, she rolls her into the ring and hits two more scoop slams for a two count cover. Hazuki picks up Arisa and tosses her down by the hair, she goes for bootscrapes but Arisa kicks her in the leg and connects with a series of kicks to Hazuki’s chest. Arisa kicks Hazuki into the corner, Irish whip by Arisa but Hazuki rebounds out of the corner with a dropkick. Half nelson slam onto her knee by Hazuki, she pushes Arisa against the ropes and hits a series of bootscrapes followed by a running boot.

Hazuki throws Arisa into the corner and hits a running back elbow, Backstabber by Hazuki and she transitions it into an armtrap crossface. Arisa gets a foot on the ropes for the break, Hazuki picks her up but Arisa pushes her off and the two trade elbows. Pump Kick by Hazuki, she picks up Arisa but Arisa gets away and delivers a jumping kick. Both wrestlers are down but Hazuki is up first, running boot by Hazuki and she goes out to the apron, but Arisa avoids her springboard attack and puts Hazuki in a sleeper hold. Hazuki gets to the ropes for the break, Arisa goes up top but Hazuki recovers and joins her. They trade elbows while on the top turnbuckle until Arisa headbutts Hazuki off, 1399 by Arisa and she covers Hazuki for a two count. ADAMAS by Arisa, but Arisa lifts Hazuki up before the three count so she can nail the Brazilian Kick. Cover by Arisa, but Hazuki barely gets her shoulder up. Arisa goes for a running knee but Hazuki ducks it and hits a DDT, Michinoku Driver by Hazuki but her cover gets two. Hazuki picks up Arisa but Arisa blocks a suplex attempt and they trade elbows. Hazuki throws Arisa into the corner and hits a jumping elbow, Arisa elbows her back but Hazuki sets up Arisa in the corner and hits a Codebreaker.

Hazuki goes to the apron and hits a springboard missile dropkick to Arisa’s back, cover by Hazuki but it gets a two count. She transitions into an armtrap crossface, Arisa almost makes the ropes but Hazuki rolls her back and applies the Rings of Saturn. Again Arisa wiggles to the ropes and this time she makes it for the break, Hazuki goes off the ropes and nails a running boot to the side of Arisa’s head. Hazuki drags up Arisa and slams her in front of the corner, she goes up top but Arisa recovers and joins her. Hazuki knees Arisa and flips back to the mat, she boots Arisa in the head and then hits a neckbreaker. Hazuki goes up top but Arisa avoids the Bombs Away and hits a jumping knee, she connects with a second jumping knee and covers Hazuki for two. Arisa picks up Hazuki but Hazuki ducks the Brazilian Kick and applies La Magistral for two. Headbutt by Hazuki but Arisa kicks her in the head, Shining Impact by Arisa and she covers Hazuki for the three count! Arisa Hoshiki is the winner and still the champion.

I’m glad that Samurai TV didn’t clip this match as it was a hell of an encounter. Arisa has really grown on me, at first as she transitioned from midcard tag wrestler to suddenly a main event wrestler, I thought her offense was a bit repetitive and lacked creativity, but she is clearly over that hump as she was great here. All her strikes were snug and she is a lot of fun to watch. Hazuki also continues to improve as she showed a lot of fire, taking it hard to Arisa but never resorting to Oedo Tai Tactics as it was a pretty clean fight from start to finish. They mixed it up really well between strikes/power moves/submissions to keep things interesting and the ‘outside the ring’ portion was kept to the point. The near falls were convincing and the Shining Impact was the perfect way to end the match as it felt like a real exclamation point after a close back and forth battle. One of the better Stardom matches I have seen so far this year, just an exciting and well paced match between two wrestlers that keep getting better each time I watch them. Worth going out of your way to see.  Highly Recommended

Stardom World Big Summer - Bea Priestley vs. Momo Watanabe
(c) Bea Priestley vs. Momo Watanabe
World of Stardom Championship

It is time for the main event. Stardom fans have a real love/hate relationship with Bea (most in the latter category) as she is so convincing in her Top Gaijin gimmick that she has worked many fans into a shoot over it. Which is great, I love her, angering fans is what heels are supposed to do. Bea won the World of Stardom Championship on May 4th from Kagetsu, and this is her third defense of the title. Momo has never held the World of Stardom Championship but did have the Wonder of Stardom Championship earlier this year, so she is no stranger to being one of the top wrestlers in Stardom. Many consider Momo the future Ace of Stardom, and winning the title here from Bea would be a big step in that direction.

They tie-up to start, Momo pushes Bea into the corner but quickly gives a clean break. Momo takes Bea to the mat and they trade holds, but neither gets the advantage and they return to their feet. Wristlock by Bea but Momo reverses it, snapmare by Bea and she applies a chinlock but Momo gets to the ropes for the break. They end up on the mat again with Momo in control, Bea returns to her feet and tosses Momo down before backing off. Headlock by Bea but Momo Irish whips out of it, elbow by Bea in the corner but Momo fires back with a dropkick and Bea rolls out of the ring to regroup. Momo goes to the apron and goes for a diving knee, but Bea moves out of the way and gets up on the apron to deliver a PK. Bea stomps on Momo’s arm and twists it around the ring post, she lets her go after a moment and returns to the ring. Momo doesn’t follow fast enough so Bea goes back out after her and throws her into the ring post. Bea kicks Momo in the arm and returns to the ring for good, Momo rolls in too but Bea immediately goes back to Momo’s arm.

Bea throws Momo into the corner but Momo rebounds out of it with a dropkick, another dropkick by Momo and she follows with a third. Momo picks up Bea and hits a snap vertical suplex, they slowly return to their feet and trade elbows. Bea takes Momo to the mat and applies a butterfly lock, Momo gets out of it but Bea cradles her for two. Running knee by Bea, she picks up Momo and hits a side suplex for another two count cover. Bea picks up Momo and gets her on her shoulders, but Momo reverses the Queen’s Landing and rolls Bea to the mat. Kick by Momo, she gets on the top turnbuckle and delivers the diving Somato for a two count. Momo quickly puts Bea in the chickenwing, Bea gets out of it but Momo drops her with a half nelson suplex. Somato by Momo, but Bea grabs the bottom rope to force the break. Momo picks up Bea and sets her up for the B Driver, she climbs the turnbuckles with Bea on her back but Bea gets away and hits a powerbomb for a two count. Bea waits for Momo to get up and charges, but Momo kicks her back and gets on the top turnbuckle.

Bea kicks her in the head to send Momo to the apron, Bea quickly jumps up to the top turnbuckle and hits a double footstomp to Momo’s back. Both wrestlers are slow to get up, they manage to get onto the apron and the pair trade elbows. Bea goes for a suplex but Momo blocks it before hitting the B Driver on the apron. Momo pulls Bea back in the ring and hits a second B Driver, cover by Momo but it gets a two count. Momo applies the crossface chickenwing, she nails the Tequila Sunrise but Bea gets a shoulder up. Momo gets Bea to her feet and delivers the Peach Sunrise, but again Bea manages to get a shoulder up. Momo pushes the referee before going back to Bea, she goes for another Peach Sunrise but Bea rolls out of it and drops Momo with a Peach Sunrise of her own for a two count. Both are slow to get up, they both kick each other in the head with Momo following with more kicks. Bea kicks her back, superkick by Bea and she nails a jumping knee. Trapped side suplex hold by Bea, but Momo kicks out at two. Bea drags Momo to her feet, she gets Momo onto her shoulders and delivers the Queen’s Landing for the three count! Bea Priestley wins and retains the championship.

From just a pure enjoyment standpoint, this match delivered, but if you scratch beneath the surface a bit there certainly were some issues. I’ll start with the good – Bea gets a lot of shit online, but she’s a very good wrestler and she showed it here as everything she did was on point. She can be rough around the edges sometimes but in this match she was at her best and delivered a great performance. Momo looked great too so just looking at their back-and-forths and execution, this was about as good as it could be. On the match layout side however, there were some issues. Bea did a good job on the arm of Momo for about five minutes, but as soon as she stopped it was immediately dropped from the match and never even got a callback spot later. So it was just wasted time, it had no impact on anything else in the match whatsoever. There were other smaller issues, like the ‘on the floor’ portion of the match felt too long with not a lot happening, but the arm offense was the biggest problem since it filled a large chunk of the match with meaningless offense. I’m not a big fan of wrestlers kicking out of their opponent’s big finisher, at least in this case Bea was mostly incapacitated for awhile so it wasn’t just blown off, but it is often a tip-off of the end result. Overall a really good match, it didn’t reach the level of the previous match but still worthy of a Korakuen Hall main event.  Recommended

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