Misa Kagura Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/misa-kagura/ Reviews and Wrestler Profiles from Joshi Wrestling Sat, 20 Aug 2022 20:51:04 +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 Misa Kagura Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/misa-kagura/ 32 32 93679598 JTO GIRLS Tomoka Inaba and Aoi 20th Birthday Festival on 7/22/22 Review https://joshicity.com/jto-girls-tomoka-inaba-aoi-20th-birthday-festival-july-22-2022-review/ Sat, 20 Aug 2022 20:51:04 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=20466 Featuring Yuu Yamagata vs. rhythm!

The post JTO GIRLS Tomoka Inaba and Aoi 20th Birthday Festival on 7/22/22 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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JTO GIRLS 7/22/22 Poster

Event: JTO GIRLS Tomoka Inaba and Aoi 20th Birthday Festival
Date: July 22nd, 2022
Location: JTO Arena Chiba Main Store in Chiba, Japan
Announced Attendance: 17
Broadcast: Sold in JTO’s Online Shop

While I am known for occasionally reviewing really obscure wrestling events, I may be going too far this time. This show was filmed from a ringside seat and sold only on JTO’s online shop for 2,000 yen. As I am a noted Aoi fan, I am required to watch as much JTO as possible, so I purchased it and here we are. This was a short show that took place in their building with a small audience, mostly for fun. We do have one mystery trainee exhibition match, so if Trainee R turns out to be a big time wrestler down the road, this footage may be highly sought after. Not a likely scenario but stranger things have happened. Here is the full card:

All the non-trainee wrestlers on the show have a profile on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go to it. Onto the show!


Tomoka Inaba vs. Trainee R
Exhibition Match

The event beings with an Exhibition Match between Inaba and one of their young trainees, whose identity has not been revealed. Or her wrestling name hasn’t been decided, one or the other. She is going by Trainee R, so I guess that is what I will call her also. Inaba is the homegrown Ace of JTO so it makes sense that she will be showing the trainee the ropes in this non-match that is just designed to give Trainee R some experience.

Inaba didn’t even take her t-shirt off for this match, emphasizing that it is just an exhibition. They tie-up to start and trade some basic holds, Inaba works a headlock but Trainee R reverses it into a wristlock. Inaba gets the headlock re-applied and takes Trainee R to the mat, but Trainee R gets away and the two return to their feet. Kick by Inaba and she returns to the headlock, Inaba delivers a series of snapmares but Trainee R wiggles away and applies a wristlock. Irish whip by Inaba but Trainee R hits a hard shoulderblock, elbows by Trainee R but Inaba elbows her hard to the mat. Stomps by Inaba, she picks up Trainee R and elbows her some more. Hip toss by Inaba but Trainee R elbows her, kick by Inaba and she hits a scoop slam. Trainee R gets back up but after an elbow goes back down, Trainee R fires up and hits a series of elbows but Inaba knocks her to the mat again. Scoop slam by Inaba and she hits a second one, but the bell has rung as the time expires. The match is a Draw.

Its impossible to either expect too much or read too much into a rookie exhibition match, but what Trainee R did here was pretty crisp even if it was basic. A formulaic match for sure that went as expected, but still necessary practice for the trainee to get some experience in front of a live crowd.

rhythm vs. Yuu Yamagata
rhythm vs. Yuu Yamagata

The real show has begun as the young rhythm challenges Yamagata. rhythm debuted in the summer of 2019 but missed almost a year of time between now and then, so she is still pretty much on the “rookie” path as she has under 50 matches in her career. She gains valuable experience here against the super veteran Yuu, who debuted before rhythm was even born. Yuu Yamagata is going to win, but hopefully the youngster will learn a thing or two along the way.

They trade wristlocks to start, rhythm gets a headlock applied but Yuu gets rhythm to the mat with a headlock of her own. rhythm returns to her feet and reverses the hold, Yuu eventually gets out of it but rhythm takes her to the mat. Yuu gets out of the headlock as both return to their feet, Irish whip by Yuu and she elbows rhythm in the chest. Yuu drops a knee on rhythm’s face before applying a reverse chinlock, Yuu picks up rhythm and throws her into the corner. Yuu kicks at rhythm and hits a couple knees, snapmare by Yuu and she goes out to the apron to hit a slingshot stomp. rhythm gets up and fights back with elbows, knee by Yuu but rhythm hits a back elbow followed by a bulldog. rhythm picks up Yuu, she goes out to the apron and snaps Yuu’s neck on the second rope. rhythm gets back into the ring but Yuu quickly recovers and the two trade strikes, Yuu eventually blocks one of rhythm’s blows and applies a choke. rhythm gets to the ropes for the break, Yuu walks up to rhythm but rhythm quickly goes for a triangle choke. Yuu blocks it so rhythm hits a neckbreaker instead, she goes for the bulldog but Yuu pushes her off. rhythm boots Yuu and hits the bulldog anyway, she picks up Yuu but Yuu hits an enzuigiri. Yuu goes to pick up rhythm but rhythm goes for the triangle choke again, she rolls it into a crossface but Yuu gets to the ropes. rhythm picks up Yuu but Yuu pushes her off and drops rhythm with a dropkick for a two count. Yuu quickly puts rhythm in a Facelock and rhythm taps out! Yuu Yamagata is the winner.

I am not sure if rhythm is “good” but she wears a mask and therefore I love her. She has been improving however, she was pretty rough her first year but I do see signs of progress. Still, she needs more experience, hopefully she gets better. Yuu was pretty giving here all things considered, and even though rhythm didn’t have any nearfalls in the match it was far from a squash. I appreciate rhythm’s bulldog-based offense, it is not effective but its fun anyway. Its good to see rhythm going in the right direction, hopefully matches like this continue her growth.

Aoi and Tomoka Inaba vs. Misa Kagura and Sumika Yanagawa
Aoi and Tomoka Inaba vs. Misa Kagura and Sumika Yanagawa

For the main event we get an all JTO GIRLS affair, as Tomoko Inaba does double duty for the show. These are most of the top Joshi wrestlers in the promotion, they have an official ranking system and I believe going into this match that Inaba was #1, Aoi was #3, and Misa Kagura was #4 (Yuu Yamagata is #2 but wrestled in the last match). It isn’t terribly fair that the top two home grown talent are on the same side, but life isn’t always fair. Inaba is slowly becoming too good for JUST TAP OUT, I wouldn’t be shocked if she left at some point. Aoi is still developing but is a lot of fun (plus is a good dancer). Kagura and Yanagawa are a step below both in popularity and in-ring skill, but are early enough in their careers that its not a red flag or anything like that. Not sure what to expect from a small show main event, but it should be solid anyway.

Misa and Sumika throw streamers at their opponents to distract them to get the early advantage, Aoi is isolated and is dropped with a double armdrag. Misa and Sumika both slam Aoi to the mat before Misa stays in as the legal wrestler, elbow drop by Misa but Aoi avoids the senton and delivers a dropkick. Aoi leads Misa back to her corner to tag in Inaba, Misa is double teamed in the corner before Aoi starts on Misa’s wrist. Hammerlock by Inaba and she stomps on Misa’s arm, she tags Aoi back in and Aoi goes to the top turnbuckle. Ax handle by Aoi to Misa’s arm as the arm work continues, Aoi attacks Misa’s arm some more before tagging in Inaba. Inaba applies an armbar but picks Misa back up after a moment, Irish whip attempt by Inaba but Misa blocks it. Kicks by Inaba, she goes for another Irish whip by Misa reverses it and tackles Inaba in the corner. Hard shoulderblock by Misa and she makes the hot tag to Sumika. Sumika delivers a jumping kick to Inaba’s chest, Aoi comes in but Sumika slams her to the mat. Sumika sets up Inaba in the corner and hits a jumping knee to her back, double knee by Sumika in the corner and she hits a back heel kick for a two count. Sumika picks up Aoi and hits a scoop slam, Misa runs in with a senton and Sumika applies a Sickle Hold.

Aoi breaks that up, Misa throws Aoi out of the ring while Sumika picks up Inaba, but Inaba blocks Sumika’s attack and cradles her for two. Inaba applies a Fujiwara Armbar but Sumika gets to the ropes for the break. Inaba tags Aoi, Sumika elbows Aoi repeatedly but Aoi doesn’t go down. Aoi chops her back but Sumika hits a headbutt, Aoi blocks her next strike however and applies an armbar. Inaba runs in and puts Misa in an armbar as well, but both of their opponents reach the ropes. Aoi goes off the ropes but Sumika avoids her and hits a Backstabber. This gives her time to tag in Misa, shoulderblocks by Misa to Aoi and she covers her for two. Misa picks up Aoi and throws her into the corner, but Aoi kicks her back and delivers a boot. Big boot by Aoi but Misa fires back with a hard shoulderblock, she goes to pick up Aoi but Aoi puts her in a reverse armbar. Misa wiggles to the ropes for the break, Aoi picks up Misa but Misa sneaks in an inside cradle for two. They trade flash pins with neither getting the three count, Sumika catches Aoi with a heel kick and Misa applies the Misa Roll 2 on Aoi for the three count! Misa Kagura and Sumika Yanagawa are the winners.

Such a carny wrestling thing to do – having a wrestler lose to a scrub on their own birthday. Kidding aside, this was a pretty good main event considering the size and scope of the show. Even though the match wasn’t long (about 12 minutes) they weren’t mailing it in, with Sumika in particular seeming to step up her game and make an effort to be noticed. You’d expect for younger wrestlers to be fired up regardless of the situation but it was good to see all four didn’t see this non-televised show as an excuse to coast. The arm work was well done (although ultimately meaningless) and everything looked pretty crisp. Not a match that anyone needs to go out of their way to see but an enjoyable offering between four up-and-coming wrestlers.  Mildly Recommended

The post JTO GIRLS Tomoka Inaba and Aoi 20th Birthday Festival on 7/22/22 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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20466
Stardom “NEW BLOOD 3” on 7/8/22 Review https://joshicity.com/stardom-new-blood-3-july-8-2022-review/ Sun, 07 Aug 2022 06:40:29 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=20415 The young Miyu Amasaki challenges Giulia!

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Stardom New Blood 3

Event: Stardom “NEW BLOOD 3”
Date: July 8th, 2022
Location: Shinagawa Intercity Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 419
Broadcast: Streamed on YouTube

In early 2022, Stardom announced a new concept for the promotion that gives a bigger platform for less experienced Joshi wrestlers. As part of the idea, wrestlers from other promotions would also be invited to join, giving the events a unique feel and separating it from their normal events. Called “New Blood,” the first event was well received and the series continued, with this being the third show with the “New Blood” branding. The main event has Stardom’s Miyu Amasaki, who debuted this year, against one of the top wrestlers in Stardom – Giulia. But as mentioned, this is not an “all Stardom” affair as we also have wrestlers from Ganbare, JUST TAP OUT, PROMINANCE, Diana, and COLOR’S on the show plus Ram Kaicho. A pretty interesting line-up, here is the full card:

All wrestlers on the show have a profile on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it. As this aired on YouTube, every match will be shown in full.

Mai Sakurai vs. YuuRI
Mai Sakurai vs. YuuRI

We kick off the show with the first of many matches that will have a Stardom wrestler facing an outsider. Mai Sakurai debuted in AgZ in 2020 but joined Stardom in 2021 still relatively inexperienced. She hasn’t had a lot of success moving up the card since joining, thus why she is in the opener. She is against YuuRI, who started in JUST TAP OUT but joined DDT Ganbare just a year after debuting. Both of these wrestlers have a similar level of experience, so it should be a pretty even match.

YuuRI forces Mai to shake her hand, then dropkickers her into the corner. She charges in again but Mai moves, hitting a big boot followed by a dropkick. YuuRI avoids Mai’s elbow drop and hits a somersault senton, body press by YuuRI and she covers Mai for two. Camel Clutch by YuuRI and she pulls on Mai’s nose too for good measure, she eventually lets go but Mai blocks the scoop slam attempt as she hits one of her own. Stomp by Mai and she applies a Camel Clutch of her own, she lets go and knees YuuRI in the back. YuuRI elbows her and the two trade blows, YuuRI goes off the ropes and she applies a flying sleeper hold. Mai gets into the ropes for the break, YuuRI goes for the 619 but Mai moves out of the way. Mai goes off the ropes but YuuRI trips her before kneeing Mai in the back. Dropkick by YuuRI and she connects this time with the 619, jackknife cover by YuuRI but it gets two. YuuRI goes to the top turnbuckle but Mai recovers and elbows her before she can jump off, tossing YuuRI back into the ring. Boot by Mai and she hits two more before dropping YuuRI with a standing leg lariat. Mai picks up YuuRI but YuuRI pushes her off and applies a rolling Schoolboy for two. YuuRI goes to the top turnbuckle again and this time hits a missile dropkick, cover by YuuRI but it gets two. YuuRI goes off the ropes but Mai boots her, but YuuRI kicks out of the pin. Shining Yakuza Kick by Mai, she goes to the top turnbuckle and delivers a diving elbow drop, but YuuRI reverses the cover. Both wrestlers get back up, YuuRI goes for a couple flash pins but they don’t work. Shining Yakuza Kick by Mai, she picks up YuuRI and delivers the Shining Buster for the three count! Mai Sakurai is the winner!

I am as impressed with YuuRI as I am unimpressed with Mai so they kinda cancelled each other out here. YuuRI has a variety of fun looking offense, I loved the running sleeper hold, and at her stage of experience she really looked good. Mai has a very limited moveset and doesn’t necessarily even hit those moves crisply, every promotion needs lower end wrestlers to eat pins and I doubt Mai will ever move past that unless she really ups her game. More good than bad thanks to YuuRI and a suitable opener for this type of event.

Ami Sourei vs. Nanami
Ami Sourei vs. Nanami

We are only at Match #2 but business is already picking up as we get a look at Ami “The Bodyguard” Sourei against the young Nanami. Ami just recently joined Stardom, she began her career in AgZ as Ami Miura and is a power-based wrestler. Nanami wrestles out of Diana, she is only 15 years old but has been wrestling for almost three years. Ami has the home field and size advantage so she is going to win, but hopefully the young Nanami gets to show off a bit in defeat.

They tie-up to start, Ami pushes Nanami into the ropes but Nanami switches positions with her and hits a series of elbows. Irish whip by Ami and they collide with neither going down, Nanami tries to knock over Ami a few more times but has no luck. Kick by Nanami but Ami hits a hard shoulderblock, Ami picks up Nanami and throws her into the corner. Ami puts Nanami across the second rope and hits a running body avalanche, cover by Ami but it gets two. Ami picks up Nanami and hits a scoop slam, crab hold by Ami but Nanami gets to the ropes for the break. Irish whip by Ami to the corner but Nanami shoulderblocks her down when she charges in, Nanami goes for a slam but Ami blocks it. Nanami eventually hits the scoop slam, but Ami kicks out of the cover. Nanami picks up Ami and drops her to the mat, rolling bodyscissors by Nanami but Ami breaks out and gets to the corner.

Nanami charges in but Ami moves, body avalanche by Ami and she chops Nanami in the chest. Ami gets Nanami on her shoulders and hits a death valley bomb, she puts Nanami in a crab hold but Nanami gets to the ropes. Ami picks up Nanami, Nanami elbows her off and the two trade blows. Nanami sneaks in a backslide and a schoolboy for two counts, cradle by Nanami but that gets a two as well. Nanami charges Ami and hits a knee, neckbreaker by Nanami and she hits a body press off the second turnbuckle for two. Ami ducks an elbow and delivers a lariat, she picks up Nanami and hits a second lariat for a two count. Ami picks up Nanami and puts her on her shoulders in the Argentine Backbreaker, Nanami struggles for a moment but has to submit! Ami Sourei is the winner!

This was an interesting match. New Blood shows are kinda in their own bubble as Stardom’s most recent acquisition really shouldn’t be having a 50/50 match with a mediocre 15 year old. But since the idea of the show is to give young wrestlers a chance, I won’t complain too much. It was odd that Nanami was at times presented as almost even when it came to strength and strikes since Ami was brought in as a “bodyguard” for God’s Eye, it definitely came across more as a way to showcase Nanami than a match within the Stardom universe. Which is fine, it just seems wasted on someone like Nanami who has shown minimal improvement since debuting years ago and likely will stay low on the pecking order in Diana. Not a bad match, but kinda weird and the action was never overly interesting.

Aoi, Misa Kagura, and Tomoka Inaba vs. Hanan, Momo Kohgo, and Saya Iida
Aoi, Misa Kagura, and Inaba vs. Hanan, Kohgo, and Saya Iida

As everyone knows, I am a big fan of Aoi so I am excited to see her on a Stardom event. JUST TAP OUT is a promotion run by wrestler TAKA Michinoku, that was spawned after TAKA left K-DOJO. They run their own events but are also a training ground for wrestlers that want to expand their career even if it means joining a new promotion (such as Maika and YuuRI have done). Aoi is my favorite but Inaba is their best Joshi wrestler. They are against a lower-level Stardom team, with the STARS trio of Hanan, Kohgo, and Iida. I’m not expecting much out of this one but hopefully the JTO team will get a chance to show off.

Inaba and Hanan start the match, they trade holds and end up on the mat with Hanan going after Inaba’s arm. Inaba gets away and they reach a stalemate, Hanan tags MIRAI while Aoi also tags in. Irish whip by MIRAI ad they both go off the ropes, armdrag by MIRAI and she delivers a dropkick. Aoi tags Misa so Iida also tags in, they bump chests until Iida knocks over Misa with a hard shoulderblock. She tags Momo as Hanan also comes in, and all three attack Misa. The ring eventually clears as Momo throws Misa into the corner, but Misa avoids her dropkick and hits a shoulderblock. Running senton by Misa and she covers Momo for two. Misa tags Inaba but Hanan and Iida both get in the ring too, Inaba takes care of both of them however before going back to Momo. Inaba throws Momo into the corner but Momo avoids her charge and hits a crossbody off the second turnbuckle for two. Dropkick by Momo, she goes for the Tiger Feint Kick but Inaba moves and punches Momo in the gut. Momo returns fire with a dropkick, she tags in Iida while Inaba tags Aoi.

Iida and Aoi trade strikes, chops by Aoi against the ropes and she hits a jumping double chop. Iida gets one of her own and tags Hanan, dropkick by Hanan to Aoi and they trade elbows. Judo toss by Hanan, she picks up Aoi but Aoi blocks the suplex attempt and hits a jumping forearm. This gives her time to tag Misa, dropkick by Misa into the corner and she hits a lariat. Misa jumps on Hanan’s back with a submission, the other members of JTO come in the ring and put a respective opponent in a submission hold as well. Misa cradles Hanan and puts her in a crab hold, but Hanan gets to the ropes for the break. Back up, STO by Hanan but her covers gets two. Hanan picks up Misa but Misa blocks the slam, she goes off the ropes and clubs Hanan for a two count. Momo picks up Misa and clubs her in the back, Iida goes up top and delivers a diving shoulderblock. Hanan jumps on Iida’s back as does Momo, and together they fall on Misa with a triple body press. Wrist-clutch suplex hold by Hanan, but it gets broken up. Iida and Momo clear the ring while Hanan hits a Fameasser on Misa, but Misa barely kicks out. Hanan picks up Misa and delivers a backdrop suplex hold, and she picks up the three count! STARS win the match.

More of a showcase for Stardom’s young wrestlers than doing a lot of favors for JUST TAP OUT, but not a bad match even if it was pretty basic. Every time I watch Hanan I forget how tall she has gotten, she got the most shine in this match and I wonder once she turns 18/graduates if they are looking to move her up the card. Everyone else looked fine but it Aoi didn’t get to really do anything and Inaba only got about 30 seconds to impress. Too short to really get going, mostly mid-card filler but at least Hanan looked good.

MIRAI vs. Suzu Suzuki
MIRAI vs. Suzu Suzuki

A stealth potential banger on a show that really is focused more on getting young wrestlers a chance to shine than putting on amazing matches. I am a big fan of both wrestlers, as Mirai Maiumi was really starting to put it together in Tokyo Joshi Pro before she joined Stardom and Suzu was the Future Ace of Ice Ribbon for a reason – she’s fantastic. A year ago I’d have never expected to see these two face off on a Stardom show, yet here we are. MIRAI has been pretty protected in Stardom since joining, but Suzu (now wrestling out of her own stable, PROMINANCE) hasn’t really lost yet either here so its a clash between two young but protected future stars. Should be pretty entertaining.

They tie-up to start, Suzu gets MIRAI into the ropes but she gives a clean break. MIRAI quickly pushes her into the ropes on the opposite side but also gives a clean break, headlock by Suzu and she gets MIRAI to the mat. MIRAI gets back up and escapes the hold, she applies her own headlock but Suzu gets out of it and kicks MIRAI against the ropes. Kick by MIRAI in return but Suzu knocks her out of the ring and throws MIRAI onto the floor. Hard elbow by Suzu on the floor and she throws MIRAI into a table at ringside before pushing her onto the ramp. Suzu joins MIRAI on the ramp but MIRAI blocks the scoop slam, elbows by Suzu and she finally hits the slam. She returns to the ring while MIRAI slowly recovers, MIRAI rolls back in and Suzu greets her with stomps. MIRAI gets back to her feet and elbows Suzu, she goes off the ropes but Suzu knees her and mushes MIRAI against the ropes. Suzu goes up top and delivers a missile dropkick, MIRAI lands in the corner and Suzu drills her with a running knee. Cover by Suzu, but it gets two.

Waistlock by Suzu but MIRAI grabs the ropes to block the suplex, Suzu pulls her back but MIRAI elbows herself free. Kick by MIRAI and she rolls Suzu to the mat in a cross armbreaker, but Suzu gets to the ropes just as the lock is applied. MIRAI picks up Suzu, her Irish whip is reversed but MIRAI knocks down Suzu with a hard shoulderblock. MIRAI puts Suzu in a wrist-clutch Scorpion Deathlock, she releases the hold after a moment and covers Suzu for two. MIRAI keeps on Suzu’s arm and slams Suzu in front of the corner, she gets on the second turnbuckle but Suzu elbows her from behind and joins her. Headbutt by Suzu and she delivers a Frankensteiner, head kick by Suzu and she covers MIRAI for two. Suzu picks up MIRAI but MIRAI spins away and slams Suzu face-first into the mat. MIRAI picks up Suzu and hits a headbutt, Suzu headbutts her back and both wrestlers collapse to the mat. They slowly return to their feet and trade elbows, Suzu wins the battle and picks up MIRAI just to elbow her some more. MIRAI ducks the next elbow attempt and hits a lariat, mounted elbows by MIRAI and she hits a half nelson slam for two. MIRAI puts Suzu in an armlock, she picks up Suzu but Suzu gets away and hits a superkick. Another kick by Suzu, and she covers MIRAI for two. Suzu gets MIRAI up but MIRAI elbows free, lariat by MIRAI and she hits a second one for a two count. MIRAI picks up Suzu, Suzu gets away as the bell rings but Suzu hits a German suplex anyway. Still, the match is over and declared a Draw.

As expected, a damn good match. The Draw here wasn’t surprising, no need for either of them to drop a fall on a throwaway show as both have bigger things going on. This was a fairly even match but MIRAI generally felt more on control, as Suzu wasn’t able to hit the German until the match was over while MIRAI rocked Suzu on several occasions. The action was smooth and they mixed in different offensive methods to keep the match interesting. These two have a better match in them on a bigger stage, but still a good showcase for both, really looking forward to seeing more of Suzu in Stardom.  Recommended

Ram Kaicho vs. Waka Tsukiyama
Ram Kaicho vs. Waka Tsukiyama

My excitement to seeing Ram in Stardom was slightly dimmed by seeing who she was against, but its still fun to see her in a new environment. Kaicho will likely never be a main event star for a promotion but she has a unique look, style, and charisma that makes her one to watch wherever she pops up. I am less bullish on Waka as in-ring she has never impressed me, but she does have a fun personality and plenty of fans. I’m not sure what to expect here but hopefully Kaicho makes a good impression.

Waka avoids Kaicho’s elbow to start and goes to flip her off, but Kaicho blocks her from doing so. Kaicho tries to then flip off Waka but she blocks it as well, trip by Kaicho and she goes off the ropes, but Waka delivers a dropkick. Waka picks up Kaicho but Kaicho kicks her in the knee, elbows by Waka and the two trade blows. Stomps by Kaicho and she gets Waka into the corner, kick by Kaicho and she drags Waka back to the middle of the ring to start working on her leg. Waka gets to the ropes for the break, Waka goes for an elbow by Kaicho moves and chokes Waka. Kaicho slams Waka’s head into the mat repeatedly, she picks up Waka but Waka jumps out to the apron and trips Kaicho when she charges at her. Dropkick to the back by Waka and she puts Kaicho in a stretch hold, but Kaicho gets to the ropes. Kaicho quickly hits a Codebreaker, she picks up Waka but Waka ducks the Rainmaker and hits a Complete Shot. Waka goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick, she goes up top again and hits a second one for a two count. Waka argues with the referee so Kaicho dropkicks her from behind, she gets a hand full of powder and throws it into Waka’s face. Onryo Clutch by Kaicho, and she gets the three count! Ram Kaicho is the winner.

Just to address the elephant in the room – Waka came out with face paint that was meant to play mind games with Kaicho as it was basically the inverse of the face paint that Kaicho wears. Unfortunately the inverse looks like blackface, and while that was not the intent, it certainly upset some Western fans. Even though no offense was obviously intended, since Stardom does market to US fans its probably best if they were a little more aware of such things and err on the side of not offending part of their fanbase. Anyway, this match was pretty pedestrian. A fair bit of the action looked slightly off without being straight botched, it was like they were on different parts of the same page so they didn’t completely click. It was also short, but that may have been for the best. Not quite the spotlight I would have liked for Kaicho but she did her best, luckily this won’t be the last time we will see Kaicho in Stardom.

Haruka Umesaki, Rina, Ruaka, and Starlight Kid vs. Mina Shirakawa, Unagi Sayaka, Rina Amikura, and Yuko Sakurai
Haruka Umesaki, Rina, Ruaka, and Starlight Kid vs. Shirakawa, Unagi Sayaka, Amikura, and Sakurai

A big eight wrestler tag match before we get to the main event. This is an interesting combination of wrestlers, as Umesaki joins Oedo Tai to take on two wrestlers from Cosmic Angels and two wrestlers from COLOR’S. Starlight Kid is the clear star of her team, although it will be fun to see Diana wrestler Haruka in a different environment. While Mina and Unagi are pretty solid wrestlers (and great personalities), Amikura and Sakurai are still developing so this will be a good chance for them. I don’t know if they will get enough time to get a spotlight on everyone, so it will be interesting to see who they decide to give the most attention to.

Team Mostly Oedo Tai attack before the bell rings with general chaos taking place, eventually Unagi is isolated and quadruple teamed. Rina stays in as the legal wrestler, she puts Unagi in the ropes and she is attacked by all four of her opponents again. Rina throws down Unagi by the hair and stomps her in the corner, she tags in Ruaka but Unagi hits a Codebreaker and makes the tag to Amikura. Body avalanche by Amikura to Ruaka and she hits a running senton for a two count. Amikura goes off the ropes but Ruaka does go over with the shoulderblock attempt, they take turns trying to knock each other over until Amikura hits a crossbody. The rest of her team comes in the ring as they hit a double body press on Ruaka, Amikura picks up Ruaka but Ruaka shoulderblocks her over and reluctantly tags Haruka. Unagi tags in too, they both miss moves until Unagi hits a heel drop. Unagi picks up Haruka but Haruka elbows her, and the two trade shots. Kick by Unagi but Haruka hits a jumping neckdrop followed by a footstomp. Mina runs in and helps out, leg drop by Unagi but Haruka kicks out. Unagi tags Mina, Mina picks up Haruka and hits a series of elbows. Mina goes off the ropes but Haruka catches her with a dropkick, hard elbow by Mina and she hits a Reverse DDT for two. Mina picks up Haruka and applies a front headlock, Haruka gets away and Runa comes in and hits a hip toss.

Senton by Ruaka to Mina and Haruka follows with a neckbreaker for a two count. Mina sneaks in a cradle which also gets two, suplex by Haruka but Mina drops her with a backfist. Starlight Kid and Sakurai are tagged in, shoulderblock by Sakurai and she hits a dropkick. Elbows by Sakurai but Starlight Kid connects with a jumping forearm, kicks by Starlight Kid but Sakurai hits another shoulderblock. Sakurai charges Starlight Kid but Starlight Kid moves, the rest of her team runs in and everyone hits running strikes on Sakurai. Cover by Starlight Kid, but it gets a two count. Double Irish whip to Sakurai but Amikura comes in and they knock down Rina and Starlight Kid with shoulderblocks. They fall out of the ring, Mina goes to the top turnbuckle and dives out onto the Oedo Tai blob at ringside. Amikura rolls Starlight Kid back in where her teammates are waiting, and Haruka helps Amikura slam Starlight Kid. Elbow drop by Sakurai, but the cover is broken up. Dragon Sleeper by Sakurai but Starlight Kid gets to the ropes, Sakurai grabs her but Starlight Kid slides away and Haruka dropkicks Sakurai. Starlight Kid goes off the ropes and hits a quebrada, but Mina breaks up the cover. Amikura and Mina go off the ropes but get tripped from ringside, Unagi knocks down Starlight Kid but she eats a dropkick from Haruka and Starlight Kid. Starlight Kid goes up top and hits the swivel body press on Sakurai, but Sakurai barely gets a shoulder up. Starlight Kid picks up Sakurai but Sakurai sneaks in a small package for two. Dropkick to the knee by Starlight Kid and she puts Sakurai in the Kuro Tora Leg Killing, with Sakurai quickly tapping out! Starlight Kid, Rina, Ruaka, and Haruka Umesaki are the winners.

I was worried at first they were going to let everyone but Starlight Kid get a chance, luckily they were just saving her for last. Starlight Kid is a step above the others here in terms of general excitement to watch, but there were several other quality wrestlers (Haruka, Unagi, Mina in particular) to hold the match together. Much of it was too random without a real story, but that is what happens in an eight wrestler tag match that only goes eleven minutes. The COLOR’S wrestlers aren’t high end but are fine with the basics, but coming out of the match per usual I was focused on how crisp Starlight Kid is. She’s really good. Anyway, a perfectly fine match with a few good peaks, but nothing to get too excited about.  Mildly Recommended

Giulia vs. Miyu Amasaki
Giulia vs. Miyu Amasaki

For the main event, the young Miyu Amasaki goes against Giulia, the leader of DDM. This is obviously a very lopsided match – Giulia is one of the top female wrestlers in the world while Miyu just debuted a few months ago. But that is the fun of these cards, this is a match that wouldn’t happen if it wasn’t for this event, as it gives a young inexperienced wrestlers a chance to show off with one of the best. Miyu is far from getting a super rookie push like Utami but she is also no Lady C, landing somewhere in the middle in early exposure. We all know who is winning, and it probably won’t be close, but Giulia will likely be pretty giving to the rookie considering they are in the main event.

Giulia and Miyu lock-up, Giulia works a headlock and she gets Miyu into the ropes. Giulia gives a clean break, she blocks Miyu’s tackle attempt but they end up on the mat anyway with Giulia in the dominate position. Giulia goes for an armbreaker but Miyu quickly gets to the ropes for the break. Back up they lock-up, Miyu gets Giulia into the ropes this time but Giulia switches positions with her, she gives a clean break but Miyu elbows her in the chest. Giulia elbows her back which sends Miyu to her knees, she gets back up though and returns fire. Hard elbow by Giulia, Miyu connects with a few in return but Giulia tackles her and gets her back. Sleeper by Giulia but Miyu switches places with her, Giulia quickly rolls out of it however and Miyu grabs the ropes. Slam by Giulia and she gets in the mount position, Miyu tries to fight out of it and eventually rolls into the ropes to get the break. Giulia knocks Miyu into the corner and hits a dropkick, snapmare by Giulia and she applies a sleeper. Giulia picks up Miyu and hits a scoop slam, cover by Giulia but it gets two. Giulia picks up Miyu but Miyu snaps off a vertical suplex, she goes for the Space Rolling Elbow but Giulia moves. Miyu hits a dropkick anyway but Giulia doesn’t go down, a second dropkick doesn’t knock her over either.

Miyu runs at Giulia and this time hits a jumping DDT, cover by Miyu but it gets a two count. Miyu picks up Giulia and applies a double underhook, but Giulia gets out of it and hits a back bodydrop. Giulia goes for a cocky pin but Miyu grabs her leg and goes for a cross kneelock, she finally gets it locked in and Giulia gets to the ropes. Miyu stomps on Giulia’s leg and twists it in the second rope, dropkick to the knee by Miyu and she covers Giulia for two. Double underhook by Miyu but Giulia blocks it again, Giulia pushes Miyu off but Miyu delivers a dropkick. Miyu goes off the ropes but Giulia does too, Miyu spins Giulia around and nails a double underhook sit-out facebuster for a nearfall. Miyu elbows Giulia as they get up but Giulia hits a front dropkick, covering Miyu for two. STF by Giulia, but Miyu gets a hand on the ropes. Giulia picks up Miyu and drops her with a backdrop suplex, which Miyu is very slow to recover from. She eventually gets back up and is promptly dropkicked in the back for her trouble, Giulia goes to the top turnbuckle but Miyu doesn’t get up for a bit. Giulia patiently waits and hits a missile dropkick when she finally does, cover by Giulia but Miyu gets a shoulder up. Giulia picks up Miyu but Miyu gets her back and quickly cradles Giulia with a jackknife for two. Giulia quickly recovers, Miyu elbows at Giulia but Giulia grabs her and nails the Glorious Driver for the three count! Giulia is the winner.

Either Miyu is the best seller in wrestling or she was in serious pain by the end of this match. Probably the latter. Giulia was very giving here but also clever in how she did it, with her cockiness directly leading to Miyu getting in control. First was the cocky cover, allowing Miyu to get her to the mat, but Giulia also didn’t take Miyu’s kneelock seriously until it was locked on and too late. That little segment helped lead to Miyu getting a minute or two to show off and get a close fall or two, not that anyone thought they’d work but it was far from a squash match or a traditional “Veteran vs. Rookie” match. Its hard to recommend a match too highly when the winner is clear and one of the wrestlers is still pretty basic, but Miyu looked good in defeat and Giulia showed why she isn’t your typical top star. Overall a pretty good match and a fitting main event for this type of show.  Mildly Recommended

The post Stardom “NEW BLOOD 3” on 7/8/22 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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Ice Ribbon #1183 Dojo Show on 3/5/22 Review https://joshicity.com/ice-ribbon-1183-dojo-show-march-5-2022-review/ Thu, 17 Mar 2022 05:07:03 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=20046 Our first look at Club Ice Ribbon!

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Ice Ribbon #1183 Poster

Event: Ice Ribbon #1183
Date: March 5th, 2022
Location: Ice Ribbon Dojo in Saitama, Japan
Announced Attendance: 38
Broadcast: Streamed Live on Club Ice Ribbon

Last month, Ice Ribbon launched a new streaming service – Club Ice Ribbon. Club Ice Ribbon shows different content than their Nico Pro channel, with its main ‘draw’ being they will air live all their dojo events. Other events will also be added on a delay, and there will be other special features, but the dojo events are the main attraction for people that just want to watch as much wrestling as possible. These are smaller shows, as the name implies, and likely will not have any title matches or big matches in general as those will be saved for non-dojo events. These are more designed to help get experience for the younger wrestlers while hopefully also putting on a good show. Here is the full card:

Lots of young wrestlers here, should be fun to see how they are coming along. All wrestlers on the event have a profile on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

Ibuki Hoshi and Kiku vs. Kaho Matsushita and Sumika Yanagawa
Ibuki Hoshi and Kiku vs. Kaho Matsushita and Sumika Yanagawa

We start the event with some less experienced wrestlers, which will be a common theme throughout the night. Ibuki and Kaho are both under 20 years old and are two wrestlers that Ice Ribbon would love to develop into the next stars of the promotion. Kiku is a rookie but is also 43 years old, she is unlikely to be a future star in the promotion but its great that Ice Ribbon embraces people of all ages that want to live their wrestling dreams. Finally, Sumika is visiting from JUST TAP OUT, she started wrestling in late 2020 and is 31 years old. A unique combination but with similar experience levels.

Ibuki and Kaho start the match, they trade wristlocks and hammerlocks until Ibuki gets Kaho to the mat. Kaho quickly gets out of it and hits a dropkick, she tags in Sumika and Sumika elbows Ibuki against the ropes. Irish whip by Sumika but Ibuki hits a hard shoulderblock and tags Kiku. Kiku goes for a slam but Sumika blocks it and hits one of her own, snapmares by Sumika and she applies a stretch hold. Ibuki comes in to help but Kaho cuts her off and puts her in a stretch hold as well, before both teammates let go. Sumika pushes Kiku near the ropes and stands on her back, knee to the back by Sumika and she works a headlock. Kaho tags in, Kaho throws down Kiku by the head and kicks her in the corner. Camel Clutch by Kaho but she lets go after a moment and hits a scoop slam. She tags Sumika, Irish whip by Sumika and she hits a drop toehold. Sickle Hold by Sumika, but Kiku inches to the ropes to get the break. Sumika picks up Kiku but Kiku elbows her off, headbutt by Sumika but Kiku schoolboys her for the two count. This gives her time to tag Ibuki, shoulderblock by Ibuki to Sumika as Kaho runs in, Kaho tries to help but Ibuki dropkicks both of them. Ibuki goes back to Sumika, chop by Ibuki but Sumika catches her with a boot. Snapmare by Sumika and she applies a full nelson, but Ibuki gets to the ropes. Sumika sets up Ibuki in the ropes and hits a knee to her back, cover by Sumika but it gets a two count.

Sumika picks up Ibuki and throws her into the corner, jumping knee by Sumika but Ibuki delivers a Codebreaker. Both wrestlers end up knocking each other out, Sumika gets to her corner first and tags in Kaho. Kaho dropkicks Ibuki, she picks her up and the two trade strikes. Ibuki ends the duel by hitting a side Russian leg sweep, she quickly applies a submission hold from it but it gets broken up. Kaho ducks an elbow and delivers a dropkick, hard shoulderblock by Kaho and she follows with another dropkick for two. Ibuki slams Kaho to the mat and makes the tag to Kiku, Kiku goes off the ropes and hits a dropkick. More dropkicks by Kiku but Kaho eventually stands toe to toe with her as they trade elbows. Schoolboy by Kiku but Kaho gets out of it and applies one of her own for a two count. Dropkick by Kiku and she applies a modified Scorpion Deathlock, but it gets quickly broken up. Kiku kicks Kaho in the corner and hits a neckbreaker, but Kaho kicks out of the cover. Shoulderblock by Kaho and she puts her in a kneelock, but Ibuki breaks it up. Sumika gets rid of Ibuki, Kaho drops Kiku onto the mat and covers her for two. Leg hook slam by Kaho, but the cover gets broken up. Vertical suplex by Kaho, she picks up Kiku and nails a wrist-clutch half nelson suplex for the three count! Kaho Matsushita and Sumika Yanagawa win!

That started ok but it really went off the rails the last couple minutes, not sure what happened there. I’m never going to be but so hard on rookies/young wrestlers as there is still learning going on, but the execution here was pretty hit and miss. Sumika and Kaho both looked good in general, Ibuki had her moments but Kiku has the worst showing of the foursome with some iffy dropkicks and strikes. The sequence between Kaho and Kiku towards the end while Sumika stayed in the ring seemingly thinking a spot was coming for her but never did was awkward, clearly a misunderstanding of some sort but pretty noticeable. Good experience for all involved and Kaho shows some early promise, but not the tightest match with rookies I have seen, may have benefited by being half the time it was.

Totoro Satsuki vs. Yuko Sakurai
Totoro Satsuki vs. Yuko Sakurai

Our only singles match on the event, as Yuko challenges Totoro. Yuko started her career in AgZ but after the promotion “ceased” running wrestling events (which they did not actually do) she became a Freelancer as part of the Color’s unit. She debuted back in 2018 but she has not had much notable success in her career, thus why she is in the second match of a Ice Ribbon Dojo event. Totoro debuted in Ice Ribbon in 2017, she has developed into a solid midcarder but may have reached her ceiling. Not too high of expectations for this, but I am interested to see what Yuko can do.

Yuko starts the match trying to knock over Totoro but isn’t able to, as Totoro sends her crashing to the mat. Totoro picks up Yuko and throws her into the corner, Totoro mushes her with her foot but Yuko gets away and connects with an elbow. Yuko starts on Totoro’s back and puts her in a stretch hold, she lets go after a moment and stomps her towards the ropes. Totoro stands up which sends Yuko flying, stomps Totoro and she stands on Yuko’s back. Totoro sits on Yuko’s back and stretches her, she lets go and picks up Yuko, leading to the two trading elbows. Yuko gets Totoro’s back but Totoro hiptosses her down, body press by Totoro and she covers Yuko for two. Totoro picks up Yuko but Yuko wiggles away and puts her in an abdominal stretch. Totoro gets to the ropes for the break, dropkick by Yuko and she covers Totoro for two. Lariat by Totoro but Yuko fires back with an elbow and shoulderblock. Yuko picks up Totoro and puts her in a dragon sleeper, but Totoro gets to the bottom rope. Yuko positions Totoro and goes to the top turnbuckle, but Totoro recovers and elbows her. Totoro gets Yuko on her shoulders but Yuko gets away and rolls her up for two. Yuko goes off the ropes but Totoro hits a crossbody for two. Kamikaze by Totoro, and she covers Yuko for two. Totoro goes to the second turnbuckle and nails a diving senton, and she picks up the three count! Totoro Satsuki is the winner!

A pretty standard bigger wrestler vs. smaller wrestler match. Totoro has improved over the years and works well within her limitations, although she didn’t have as much to work with here as they were really focused on the big vs. little storyline. As such, Yuko didn’t get a chance to show much, but she looked fine in what they did. A pretty basic match, nothing wrong with it but nothing particularly memorable either.

Asahi and Misa Kagura vs. Nao Ishikawa and Rina Amikura
Asahi and Misa Kagura vs. Nao Ishikawa and Amikura

Ice Ribbon gets some more help from outsiders, as the young Misa Kagura and Rina Amikura join the fray. The “Ice Ribbon” people on twitter are high on Asahi and Nao Ishikawa as having a strong future in the promotion and I haven’t watched them in awhile, so I am interested to see if there is some truth to that or wishful thinking. Misa Kagura debuted in 2020 and wrestles out of JUST TAP OUT, while Amikura is the part of the Color’s unit with Yuko Sakurai. This batch of wrestlers has slightly more experience/potential than those in the opener, so I am expecting a better structured and more fluid match here.

Nao and Misa start the match but Rina comes in too to give Nao some extra encouragement. She brings Asahi into the ring and both Rina and Nao hit shoulderblocks followed by body presses. They goof around with Asahi and Misa for a bit until things return to normally, hard shoulderblock by Nao to Misa and she tags Rina. Rina and Misa run into each other with neither going down, Rina finally knocks Misa over but Misa avoids the running senton and applies a side headlock. Drop toehold by Misa and she hits a senton, picking up a two count. Misa tags Asahi, Asahi picks up Rina and slams her head into the mat. Asahi boots Nao to the floor while Misa gets in the ring, as they double team Rina. Asahi picks up Rina but Rina chops her and the two trade blows, a battle that Asahi gets the better of. Asahi tosses Rina down by the head and pushes her down in the corner with her boot, Asahi picks up Rina but Rina catches her with a shoulderblock and a senton for two. Rina picks up Asahi and applies a backbreaker, she hangs Asahi upside down in the corner so that she and Nao can both hit running strikes. Cover by Rina, but Asahi kicks out. Rina gutwrenches Asahi but Asahi slides away and dropkicks Rina. Asahi goes off the ropes but Rina hits a rolling chop, giving her time to tag Nao. Cartwheel kneedrop followed by a body press by Nao, she picks up Asahi and hits a crossbody for two. Rina comes in, double Irish whip to Asahi and they hit a double shoulderblock. Misa runs in and hits a face crusher on both of them, but accidentally lands both on top of Asahi, so she causes more harm than good.

Nao picks up Asahi but Asahi avoids a strike and hits a Lou Thesz Press. Nao gets Asahi on her back before slamming her to the mat, cover by Nao but it gets two. Nao goes off the ropes but Asahi hits an armdrag, cradle by Asahi but Nao rolls through it and applies a leg submission hold. Asahi gets to the ropes to get out of the hold, Nao goes off the ropes but Asahi drop toeholds her into the second rope and hits the 619. Cover by Asahi, but Nao kicks out. Asahi tags Misa, stomps by Misa and she elbows Nao into the corner. Armdrags by Misa and she stomps on Misa some more, but Nao blocks the slam attempt and hits a scoop slam of her own. Nao sits down on Misa but Asahi kicks her in the head to break up the cover. Rina also comes in as Nao and Rina take back the advantage, shoulderblock by Nao to Misa and she goes to the top turnbuckle, hitting a diving crossbody for two. Nao picks up Misa but Misa throws her into the corner, lariat by Misa and she jumps on Nao’s back with a standing submission hold. Rina makes it back in to break it up, Asahi gets rid of her while Misa puts Nao in a crab hold. Nao gets to the ropes to force a break, she goes off the ropes but Rina runs in and slams her. Jackknife cover by Nao, but Asahi breaks it up. Nao goes off the ropes but Misa catches her with a dropkick, Asahi goes to the top turnbuckle and delivers a missile dropkick to Nao. Lariat by Misa, but Rina breaks up the pin. Misa picks up Nao and goes off the ropes, but Nao applies the Tachia Girl (cradle with a bridge) for the three count! Rina Amikura and Nao Ishikawa are the winners.

So if the main focus of these events is rookie/young wrestler evaluation and growth, looking at that is probably the most fair way to evaluate these matches. I’m not a huge fan of random mid-match goofiness, just a personal taste, so bell to bell not my general favorite match as they went to that “well” a few times with no real benefit. Asahi and Nao looked really good, they have all the basics down pat and have added a few intermediate moves to their arsenal as well. Misa and Rina were a step down from those two, nothing bad but a few moments that didn’t quite click right with Rina in particular at times looking a step behind. A perfectly acceptable basic match with a few bright points, but I’d like to see Nao and Asahi in a singles match to really see their potential.

Banny Oikawa and Tsukushi Haruka vs. Saran and Tsukasa Fujimoto
Oikawa and Tsukushi Haruka vs. Saran and Fujimoto

For the main event we get really our first two higher ranked wrestlers, as Tsukasa Fujimoto and Tsukushi anchor their respective teams. Fujimoto and Tsukushi need no introduction as they are the two top wrestlers in Ice Ribbon with multiple title wins between them. Saran debuted last summer and is only 13 years old, best case she is probably still a few years away from having a big role in the promotion but they are hopeful that she can develop into a quality wrestler. Banny has a shorter ceiling but since switching from a referee to a wrestler she has shown she can hold her own in the ring. I assume the vets will let the less experienced wrestlers get in most of the work, so I am curious to see how Saran has been coming along.

Saran is dressed like Tsukushi, who recently announced she is retiring, making the young wrestler quite sad. If she stays in wrestling, she’ll eventually get used to the sudden retirements we see so often in Joshi. Fujimoto and Tsukushi start the match, Fujimoto pushes Tsukushi into the ropes and hits an armdrag. They trade armdrags and flash covers, but they eventually end up in a stalemate. Fujimoto tags Saran, Saran and Tsukushi tie-up before they trade wristlocks. They then trade hammerlocks as they jockey for the advantage, Saran stomps on Tsukushi’s foot repeatedly which just makes Tsukushi mad as she throws her into the corner. Tsukushi returns the favor by stomping on Saran’s foot, Irish whip by Tsukushi but Saran catches her with a dropkick. Scoop slam by Tsukushi and she knocks Fujimoto off the apron, she goes back to Saran and puts her in a Camel Clutch. Tsukushi lets go and tags Banny, Banny picks up Saran and throws her down by the head. She does it a second time before pushing her down in the corner with her boot, Banny picks up Saran and sets her up in the ropes. Kicks by Banny and she tags Tsukushi back in, Tsukushi puts Saran’s hands on the mat and stands on them.

Banny returns, she throws Saran into the corner and delivers a dropkick. Another dropkick by Banny, she snapmares Saran and kicks her in the back before applying a submission hold. Fujimoto breaks it up, Banny goes for a crab hold but Saran quickly cradles her for two. This gives her time to tag Fujimoto, Banny briefly fights back but Fujimoto puts her in an Octopus Hold. Tsukushi breaks it up but Fujimoto delivers a dropkick to both of them, Banny kicks Fujimoto in the leg and delivers a heel drop to her back. Heel kick by Banny and she covers Fujimoto for two. Banny tags Tsukushi, Tsukushi goes for a roll into a footstomp but Fujimoto reverses it and kicks Tsukushi in the chest. Fujimoto picks up Tsukushi but Tsukushi elbows her and the two trade shots. Tsukushi wins the battle as she applies a step-over cradle followed by a low hurricanrana. Missile dropkick by Tsukushi but Fujimoto springs back up and hits a dropkick of her own. Saran runs in and also hits a dropkick, Fujimoto goes up top and delivers a missile dropkick for a two count. Fujimoto picks up Saran but they can’t execute whatever move they were going for (confused), snapmare by Fujimoto to Tsukushi and she kicks her in the back. PK by Fujimoto and she covers Tsukushi for a two count. Fujimoto tags Saran, dropkicks by Saran but Tsukushi bridges out of the pin. Saran pulls her back to the mat and kicks Tsukushi into the corner, she gets on the second turnbuckle but Banny grabs her from the apron.

That gives Tsukushi time to recover but Saran gets Tsukushi in a sleeper, while Fujimoto comes in and puts Banny in a dragon sleeper. Tsukushi gets to the ropes for the break, elbows by Saran to Tsukushi but Tsukushi elbows her back. Tsukushi elbows a lot harder than Saran so Saran is feeling each one, Irish whip by Saran and she hits a crossbody. Saran goes to the top turnbuckle but Tsukushi recovers and knocks her off.  Dropkick by Tsukushi but her cover gets two. Running elbow smash by Tsukushi, but that gets a two count as well. Banny comes in and both strike Saran, Tsukushi goes to the top turnbuckle but Saran avoids the footstomp and schoolboys Tsukushi for two. Irish whip by Saran, reversed, but Saran flips out of the corner and sunset flips Tsukushi for a two count. Saran quickly goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving crossbody, but Banny breaks it up. Saran goes off the ropes but Tsukushi catches her with a knee, low crossbody by Tsukushi but Saran rolls through the cover. Footstomp by Saran and she applies the Denden Mushi, but Banny breaks it up. Fujimoto dropkicks Banny out of the ring, Saran grabs Tsukushi’s arm but Tsukushi blocks whatever she was trying to do and applies the Tsuchigumo for the three count! Banny Oikawa and Tsukushi Haruka are the winners.

Aside from one really awkward spot towards the end, this match was pretty good. Saran is probably the smoothest young wrestler we’ve seen tonight, and even though I don’t love the idea of a new wrestler being a “clone” she did hit Tsukushi’s moves very smoothly. Obviously way too soon to say what her future holds but she seems to have a lot of potential. Fujimoto and Tsukushi acted as the vets you’d expect, looking sharp and keeping the match moving so it never wore out its welcome. Banny was just there but inoffensive, she didn’t add much to the match but she didn’t take away from it either. This mostly felt like an effort to spotlight Saran, which I think they did pretty well. A solid match and a fitting way to end a smaller dojo show.  Mildly Recommended

The post Ice Ribbon #1183 Dojo Show on 3/5/22 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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JTO TAKATaichiMania 3 on 1/10/22 Review (Joshi Matches) https://joshicity.com/jto-takataichimania-3-on-1-10-22-review-joshi-matches/ Mon, 07 Feb 2022 17:50:50 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=19870 Mayu Yukihi and Aoi clash!

The post JTO TAKATaichiMania 3 on 1/10/22 Review (Joshi Matches) appeared first on Joshi City.

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JTO TAKATaichiMania 3 Poster

Event: JUST TAP OUT “TAKATaichiMania 3”
Date: January 10th, 2022
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 783
Broadcast: New Japan World

I rarely miss an opportunity to review a JUST TAP OUT event. This is their biggest show in awhile, as they celebrate TAKATaichiMania! Since Taichi is on the event, this show actually was broadcast on New Japan World, which is a big deal for the small promotion run by TAKA Michinoku. There are two Joshi matches on the show, so I’ll be reviewing both of them. Here they are:

All wrestlers have a profile on Joshi City, you can click on their name above to go to it. Let’s hop to the matches.

Misa Kagura, rhythm, and Sumika Yanagawa vs. Nao Ishikawa, Ram Kaicho, and YAKO
Misa Kagura, rhythm, and Yanagawa vs. Ishikawa, Kaicho, and YAKO

The first Joshi match is a unique combination of JUST TAP OUT wrestlers and some random wrestlers from various other places. The JUST TAP OUT wrestlers are the lower ranking wrestlers in the promotion, as the big dogs are wrestling in the next match. None have had a lot of success yet in their young careers, but they get a chance to impress here against some new wrestlers. Nao Ishikawa is relatively inexperienced wrestler from Ice Ribbon as she has under 100 matches under her belt, she teams with Ram Kaicho of TripleSix (she also is frequently in Ice Ribbon) and the wrestler formally known as Yako Fujigasaki. Ram Kaicho is the clear star of this match, interested to see how this match is structured as I am sure they want the home talent to look good even if they don’t win.

Ram and rhythm start the match, rhythm charges at Ram but Ram moves out of the way and flips her off. She does it again, trip by Ram and she hits a back elbow. Eye rake by Ram and she applies a headlock, rhythm elbows out of it and applies a headlock of her own. Takedown by rhythm but Ram quickly gets out of it and give rhythm the double bird. YAKO and Kagura are tagged in, YAKO goes for a shoulderblock but Kagura stays on her feet. Lariat by Kagura and a second one sends YAKO to the mat, cover by Kagura but it gets two. Kagura goes for a slam but YAKO blocks it and hits one of her own, elbow drop by YAKO and she tags in Nao. Nao throws down Kagura by the hair a couple times, Irish whip by Nao and she hits a lariat in the corner. Cover by Nao, but it gets a two count. Nao tags Ram back in, mounted elbows by Ram to Kagura and she chokes her. Kagura drives Ram back but Ram is able to tag YAKO, hip attack by YAKO in the corner and she puts Kagura in a crab hold while her partners protect her.

Kagura makes it to the ropes for the break, knees by YAKO but Kagura elbows her off and hits a dropkick. This gives her time to tag Sumika while Nao is also tagged in, scoop slam by Nao and she slams rhythm as well. rhythm and Sumika grab Nao but Nao hits a crossbody on both of them, Nao picks up Sumika and slams her to the mat for a two count. Nao goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a diving crossbody, but the pin attempt is broken up. Headbutt by Sumika but Nao applies a headscissors into a cradle for two. Another cradle by Nao with a bridge, but Kagura breaks it up. All the other wrestlers run in as chaos ensues, Ram takes care of rhythm with a 619 and nails the Rainmaker on her before rolling rhythm out of the ring. Sumika and Nao are left alone, Sumika drives Nao’s face into the mat and puts her in a Sickle Hold. That gets broken up pretty quickly but her teammates come to her defense and she is able to get the move re-applied. With no one to help her, Nao has no choice but to submit! rhythm, Sumika Yanagawa, and Misa Kagura are the winners.

This was actually better than I was expecting, which admittedly doesn’t say much as I went in with really low expectations. That’s not to say it was great, it wasn’t, but it was certainly not “bad” anyway. They let Ram Kaicho be the star that she is which helped a lot, even though she didn’t dominate the match she got your eyeballs whenever she was in the ring and was entertaining as always. The less talented wrestlers in the match weren’t asked to do much, so they never dragged the match down. I’m not going to overhype it and say there is anything amazing here, but for a lower card six woman tag that got under eight minutes, they did a pretty good job to put together something interesting.

Aoi and Tomoka Inaba vs. Maya Yukihi and Yuu Yamagata
Aoi and Tomoka Inaba vs. Maya Yukihi and Yuu Yamagata

Now this match looks like it has potential. Aoi has gotten some attention recently for good reason – she is still a rookie but has shown a lot of personality and also happens to be a good dancer. She still has more to show in the ring but is less than a year into her career and is still young, plenty of time to improve. She teams with the Joshi Ace of JTO, as Tomoka Inaba has led the promotion since Maika left for Stardom. The other side has two well known veterans – Maya Yukihi who is best known for her work in Ice Ribbon and OZ Academy and Yuu Yamagata. Yuu has been wrestling for over 20 years, she never got much of a chance to lead a promotion in her years but is very respected on the scene. JUST TAP OUT is throwing the best they have at two established stars on their biggest event of the year, lets see if it pays off.

Aoi and Maya start the match, they trade holds until Aoi hits an armdrag. Maya gets out of the hold but Aoi ducks her kick and the two return to their feet. Yuu and Inaba tag in, Inaba trips Yuu and goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a dropkick. Drop toehold by Inaba and she kicks Yuu in the chest, another kick by Inaba and she applies a headlock while tagging Aoi. Aoi jumps in with an axe handle to Yuu’s arm, wristlock by Aoi and she hits an armdrag. Aoi goes for an armbar but Maya breaks it up, elbows by Aoi to Maya but Maya kicks her in the chest. Yuu tags Maya, kneedrop by Maya and she knees Aoi repeatedly in the head. Maya sets up Aoi in the ropes so that Yuu can help her, Maya tags Yuu and Yuu works over Aoi on the mat. Yuu picks up Aoi and throws her into Maya’s boot, Yuu tags Maya and Maya elbows Aoi in the corner. Maya clubs Aoi in the back, she rolls her to the mat and puts Aoi in a submission hold. Aoi gets to the ropes for the break, Maya kicks at Aoi while Aoi feebly fights back. Aoi starts doing better as she chops Maya in the chest, jumping chop by Aoi and she tags in Inaba. Yuu comes in too but Inaba fights them both off, she boots Yuu out of the ring before turning her attention to Maya.

Snapmare by Maya and she kicks Inaba in the back, but Inaba returns to her feet and returns the favor. Ankle hold by Maya, Inaba gets out of it and she punches Maya in the midsection. Inaba goes off the ropes but Maya kicks her in the head, capture suplex by Maya and she delivers a sliding kick for a two count. Maya tags Yuu, Yuu picks up Inaba and the two trade strikes. Yuu goes off the ropes but Inaba gets her back and applies a sleeper. Inaba lets go but Yuu blocks the PK, Inaba goes off the ropes but Yuu hits a flapjack followed by a sliding kick. Yuu picks up Inaba but Inaba gets away from her, kick to the head by Yuu but Inaba delivers a dropkick. Inaba makes the hot tag to Aoi, Aoi throws Yuu into the corner and delivers a big boot. She goes for the Sling Blade but Yuu pushes her off and hits a Backstabber. Armtrap choke by Yuu and she switches it to an armbar, but Inaba breaks it up. Maya comes in and takes care of Inaba, Yuu waits for Aoi to get to her knees and nails a Buzzsaw Kick. Facebuster by Yuu, but Aoi kicks out of the cover. Yuu picks up Aoi but Aoi wiggles away and hits a head kick. Sling Blade by Aoi, Inaba comes in and hits Yuu with a PK. AOI by Aoi to Yuu, and she covers her for the three count! Aoi and Tomoka Inaba are the winners!

Aoi winning here is a pretty big deal, as less than a year into her career she pinned a very respected veteran. This was fun, Maya Yukihi is always a pleasure to watch and Tomoka Inaba is one of the better wrestlers that no one knows about. Her strikes are on point and her timing is good, honestly she is probably ready to move on to a larger promotion. They didn’t do anything to steal the show as the bulk of it was basic offense, but they kept it interesting and entertaining which is all one can ask for from a mid-card match. Aoi did not look out of place which is a compliment considering who else was in the ring, looking forward to seeing where Aoi and Inaba’s careers go from here.  Mildly Recommended

The post JTO TAKATaichiMania 3 on 1/10/22 Review (Joshi Matches) appeared first on Joshi City.

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JUST TAP OUT “Queen of JTO Tournament” on 12/6/20 Review https://joshicity.com/just-tap-out-queen-of-jto-tournament-december-6-2020-review/ Mon, 28 Dec 2020 15:16:37 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=17948 A one day eight woman tournament!

The post JUST TAP OUT “Queen of JTO Tournament” on 12/6/20 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

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JTO Queen of JTO Poster

Event: JUST TAP OUT “Queen of JTO Tournament”
Date: December 6th, 2020
Location: Isami Wrestling Arena in Saitama, Japan
Announced Attendance: Unknown

So you are wondering, perhaps, why I am giving so much attention to JTO recently when they not only aren’t a Joshi promotion but aren’t a major indie either. I don’t really have an explanation, it may just be because I like masked wrestlers and JTO has a handful of masked wrestlers. Maybe I just want to watch something different. Who knows. But this is a fun show from JTO as it is a complete Joshi event, as the entire card is the Queen of JTO Tournament! Not only is it a tournament but it is being used to find the official rankings of their female roster to end the year. We get to see a number of new wrestlers on the show so that should be fun, here is the full (and unspoiled) card:

I recently updated the JTO Roster page, so all the wrestlers on the show have a profile on Joshi City. You can click on their name above to go straight to it. Since this aired on NicoPro, all matches will be shown in full. Let’s hop to it.


Aki Shizuku vs. Sumikaba Yanagawa

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Quarterfinal. We open with a major mismatch, at least on paper. Shizuku is a pretty low level wrestler but is a 13 year veteran, while Sumikaba just debuted last month. Aki hasn’t done much since REINA had their first shutdown several years ago and stays so under the radar most fans probably don’t even know who she is. Sumikaba is 29 years old so she is getting a late start for a wrestler, so we’ll see here if they are giving her a faster route to the top or she will lose in quick order to a wrestler with far more experience.

They tie-up to start and Aki easily throws Sumikaba to the mat, Sumikaba gets back up and hits a few elbows, but Aki elbows her hard in the chest to send her back down. Returning to her feet, kicks by Sumikaba but Aki boots her to the mat. Sumikaba goes for a snapmare but Aki blocks it and hits a series of snapmares of her own, Sumikaba continues trying to fight back but Aki kicks her back down. Elbows by Sumikaba and she goes for a snapmare but Aki blocks it and hits a scoop slam. Aki goes for a scoop slam but Sumikaba slides away and kicks her in the head, Sumikaba finally delivers the snapmare she wanted so badly but Aki swats away her dropkick. Argentine Backbreaker by Aki, and Sumikaba quickly taps out! Aki Shizuku is the winner and advances in the tournament.

They definitely went hard down the “veteran vs. rookie” path. A very one-sided match, which isn’t a surprise but for a lower level promotion it wouldn’t have hurt them any to give Sumikaba a little bit of a chance to show more. Nothing really to it, a skippable opener.

 lBlack R vs. rhythm
Black R vs. rhythm

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Quarterfinal. This one is a more even match, as far as we know anyway since the identity of Black R is a mystery. But I am assuming she is a new wrestler and not a veteran under a mask. rhythm debuted in 2019, took a break, and then had a “re-debut” in 2020. They seem to be going pretty slowly with her, maybe because she is only 18 years old but she still ranks towards the bottom of the Joshi wrestlers in the promotion. Black R is part of the Black Army, the evil heel group and sometimes uses weapons and other shenanigans to win. Hopefully this is at least a real match.

They circle each other to start before locking up, they trade wristlocks until rhythm puts Black R in a headlock. Black R Irish whips out of it, rhythm goes for shoulderblocks but Black R stays up and hits a hard shoulderblock of her own. rhythm gets back up and knocks Black R over, scoop slam by rhythm and she hits a running elbow in the corner. Another elbow by rhythm and she hits a third, she goes off the ropes and hits an elbow drop. rhythm picks up Black R but Black R blocks the slam attempt, hitting her own scoop slam. Footstomp by Black R and she puts rhythm in a modified chinlock, she switches it to a stretch hold before releasing her. Black R avoids rhythm’s charge in the corner and snaps her head on the top rope, running kick by Black R and she throws rhythm into the ropes before kneeing her in the back. Crab hold by Black R but rhythm gets to the ropes for the break. rhythm spins away from Black R and hits a series of elbows, bulldog by rhythm and she covers Black R for two. rhythm applies a choke but Black R gets to the ropes, rhythm picks up Black R and hits a few elbows, Black R ducks one and goes for a slam but rhythm lands on top of her. Backdrop suplex by Black R, she goes to the second turnbuckle and hits a body press to rhythm’s back. Black R gets rhythm onto her shoulders into the R Special (Canadian Backbreaker), and rhythm submits! Black R wins and continues on in the tournament.

The main takeaway from this match is that these two don’t have very good chemistry yet. They are both rookies, or rookiesque so its not the end of the world, but I wouldn’t say this was a quality encounter. rhythm’s moves lack impact and while Black R looked better, they weren’t really able to put on a cohesive match with any flow to it. Both still have a little ways to go, some base talent is there but improvements need to be made if they want to progress.

Black Changita vs. Misa Kagura
Black Changita vs. Misa Kagura

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Quarterfinal. We have a couple more rookies here, however Black Changita certainly has the experience edge as Misa just debuted in November. Black Changita, as her name implies, is part of the Black Army but if the last match is any indication they aren’t being overly cheat-y tonight. We’ll see if that trend continues. Black Changita has the clear advantage here but hopefully Misa can show something impressive if she goes down in defeat.

Misa charges Black Changita as the bell rings and elbows her repeatedly in the chest, but Black Changita kicks Misa to the mat and puts her in a crab hold. Misa gets to the ropes for the break, stomps by Black Changita and she elbows Misa in the head. Black Changita chokes Misa with her own pigtails before applying a cross-arm choke, she lets go after a moment and chokes Misa in the corner. Snapmare by Black Changita and she elbows Misa in the top of the head again, chinlock by Black Changita and she kicks Misa in the back. Kick to the chest by Black Changita and she knees Misa into the corner, Black Changita charges Misa but Misa knocks her back and hits a dropkick. Misa clubs Black Changita into the corner and goes for a move but never can get it locked in. She tries again but Black Changita walks her out of the corner, cradle by Misa but Black Changita kicks out of the hold. Kick to the head by Black Changita and she puts Misa in the Changi Hold. Misa struggles for a moment but has to tap out! Black Changita wins the match and continues on in the tournament.

Misa is still of course early in her career but she didn’t show a lot here. Black Changita looked better but mostly by comparison. This first round is rough as these wrestlers are so inexperienced, and the matches are so short that any type of mistake feels amplified. Another match in this tournament with limited need for viewing.

Tomoka Inaba vs. YuuRI
Tomoka Inaba vs. YuuRI

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Quarterfinal. The trend of the show continues as a more established wrestler takes on a newbie that debuted less than a month ago. Tomoka Inaba is the “Ace” of the JTO women’s division, as she defeated Maika when she left the promotion to cement her place. But winning this tournament would definitely boost her right to claim that distinction. She is against YuuRI, who debuted on November 11th. I’m not expecting too much more out of this than the matches that came before it, but Tomoka is pretty good so hopefully they can pull something fun out of their hat.

YuuRI attacks Tomoka before the bell rings and elbows her to the mat, mounted elbows by YuuRI and she snapmares Tomoka a few times. Drop toehold by Tomoka, she finally gets her judogi off before YuuRI goes for a takedown, which Tomoka blocks. They trade waistlocks until Tomoka gets the better position and snaps on YuuRI’s ankle. Tomoka stays on YuuRI’s ankle as she works it over with submissions and kicks, YuuRI fights back with an elbow and the two trade shots. Tomoka goes off the ropes but YuuRI applies a sleeper, Tomoka elbows her off but YuuRI gets it re-applied. YuuRI keeps the hold applied while she sits on the top turnbuckle but the referee gets her to break the hold, however YuuRI immediately jumps back on Tomoka’s back and puts the hold back in. She lets go after a moment and kicks Tomoka in the back, she goes for a Tiger Feint Kick but misses it (Tomoka was going to block it anyway). Ankle hold by Tomoka but YuuRI stands up and hits an enzuigiri to get out of it, she goes off the ropes but Tomoka does as well and applies a sleeper. YuuRI kicks out of the hold but Tomoka puts her in an ankle hold, Tomoka locks it in and YuuRI has no choice but to submit! Tomoka Inaba wins and advances in the tournament.

This was definitely the best match of the first round, although that was a pretty low bar to clear. Its hard to tell what Tomoka’s future will be as JTO is too small of a promotion for her to really get much attention or quality opponents, but she looks pretty good concerning her experience/opponent level. YuuRI is still raw and not everything she did was smooth, but at least she was aggressive and didn’t look as out of place as the other November debuting wrestlers. I still wouldn’t say this was a great match but it told a logical story and kept things moving, so it ended up decent anyway.

Aki Shizuku vs. Black R
Aki Shizuku vs. Black R

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Semifinal. This has a strong ‘veteran vs. rookie’ vibe that we saw in Aki’s first match, however Black R is more experienced than Yanagawa was and since she is in the heel stable of the promotion I assume she will put up a bigger fight. Aki is still the favorite due to her knowledge, but it should be more competitive overall than what we saw from Aki last time.

They jockey for position to start as Aki gets Black R to the mat, Black R gets out of her grasp however and hits a hard shoulderblock. Black R applies a leg submission hold but lets go after a moment, snapmare by Black R and she puts Aki in a stretch hold. Black R picks up Aki and clubs her in the back, Irish whip by Black R but Aki avoids her charge. Lariat by Black R and she hits a Stunner followed by a boot before putting Aki in a Fujiwara Armbar. Aki rolls out of it but Black R gets the hold re-applied, she switches the hold to the Cattle Mutilation but Aki gets a foot on the ropes for the break. Black R stays on Aki’s arm but Aki hits a sidewalk slam, elbow drop by Aki and she hits a body press. Aki applies a keylock but Black R wiggles to the ropes for the break, wristlock by Aki and she clubs Black R into the corner. Lariat by Aki, she flings Black R to the mat and puts her in the Fujiwara Armbar. Black R gets back to her feet and gets out of the hold with a backdrop suplex, German suplex by Black R and she puts Aki in a single leg crab hold. Aki gets to the ropes for the break, Black R picks up Aki but Aki rolls her to the mat and applies an ankle hold. Black R gets out of it but Aki blocks the R Special attempt and applies an armbar. Black R gets Aki’s back and hits another German suplex, but Aki returns to her feet and delivers a lariat. Another lariat by Aki, she picks up Black R and hits a death valley bomb. Argentine Backbreaker by Aki, and Black R submits! Aki Shizuku advances to the Finals of the tournament.

I refer to Black R as a rookie but there is no way of knowing if she really is. JTO claims her as such but her identity isn’t known, they could just be messing with us. She doesn’t really wrestle like one, using a wide variety of moves that we simply don’t see from the other JTO rookies and at times controlled the action against the veteran Aki Shizuku. Also the longest match on the show so far, the match went by quickly as they kept things interesting, with Black R seeming to be just a R Special away from picking up the upset. An even back-and-forth match, my only complaint is Black R never got payback on Aki for her no-sell spot but otherwise a solid match.  Mildly Recommended

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

This match is part of the Queen of JTO Semifinal. We get what feels like the highest ranking Joshi wrestler in Black Army versus the highest ranking JTO ‘home army’ wrestler, making it interesting they decided to make this the Semifinal instead of the Final. This is the third match singles match between these two, and they have split those contests so this is the rubber match for 2020. Either could win this, but it still feels like Inaba has the advantage due to the promotion seeming to get behind her as the female leader of the promotion.

Kick by Black Changita to start and she goes for Tomoka’s arm, wristlock by Black Changita and she wraps Tomoka’s arm in the top rope so she can twist on it. Irish whip by Black Changita and she puts Tomoka in an armbar, Tomoka rolls out of it so Black Changita switches to a cross armbreaker attempt. She gives up and kicks Tomoka in the arm before going back to the hold, Tomoka rolls away again but Black Changita goes for a double armbar. Tomoka gets into the ropes for the break, kicks to the arm by Black Changita and she applies the cross armbreaker. Tomoka quickly inches to the ropes to get the break, stomps by Black Changita and she hits a series of vertical suplexes. Black Changita goes for a submission but Tomoka quickly slips away and puts Black Changita in the ankle hold. Black Changita gets to the ropes for the break, Black Changita goes for a kick but Tomoka ducks it. Black Changita goes for Tomoka’s arm but Tomoka gets away and delivers a PK. Ankle hold by Tomoka and she switches it to the T Lock (modified Figure Four Leglock), getting a quick tap out from Black Changita! Tomoka Inaba wins and advances to the Finals.

The match had some clear structural issues, with Tomoka doing very little limb work to weaken the leg as Black Changita controlled the submission game for much of the match, but I did come away impressed with Black Changita. In previous matches I saw with her, she was mostly a lackey but once she got to show her skill on her own she seems to really know what she is doing. Like with Black R, I don’t know for 100% certain that she is actually a rookie, but if she is, she is pretty smooth. The match was too short and poorly laid out to recommend, but both wrestlers themselves looked pretty good.

Misa Kagura vs. rhythm vs. Sumikaba Yanagawa vs. YuuRI
Misa Kagura vs. rhythm vs. Sumikaba Yanagawa vs. YuuRI

This is a four-way Elimination Match. I mentioned briefly at the top that this tournament is designed to determine the official ranking for the Joshi Division in JUST TAP OUT. Well to get the ranking, you have to figure out the order from #5 to #8, which is what this elimination match will help with. rhythm has the most experience of the wrestlers in this match, but even that is only slightly so it is anyone’s game.

Everyone goes after rhythm to start the match, rhythm fights them off at first but eventually is stomped down in the corner. All three hit running strikes on rhythm in the corner, Misa then knocks over both YuuRI and Sumikaba before kicking rhythm. Armdrags by Misa to rhythm and she dropkicks rhythm, lariat by Misa and she gets on her back to apply a submission hold. Cradle by Misa and she puts rhythm in a crab hold, but Sumikaba breaks it up for unknown reasons. YuuRI kicks Sumikaba and the two trade elbows, Misa tries to interrupt but she gets knocked to the mat. YuuRI and Sumikaba keep going at it until Misa has seen enough and puts them both in a crab hold. rhythm breaks it up as now I hate the match, but Misa lariats rhythm. rhythm elbows Misa in the corner and connects with a running back elbow, but Sumikaba boots rhythm. Sumikaba kicks over YuuRI as well before putting Misa in the Sickle Hold. Misa submits, so Misa Kagura is eliminated from the match. YuuRI quickly puts Sumikaba in a sleeper but rhythm breaks it up, so she puts rhythm in the sleeper instead. rhythm gets out of it, YuuRI puts the sleeper back on Sumikaba before letting go and kicking her in the back. Tiger Feint Kick by YuuRI but rhythm grabs YuuRI and hits a bulldog. rhythm puts YuuRI in a cross arm submission, and YuuRI submits! YuuRI is eliminated from the match. rhythm picks up Sumikaba but Sumikaba hits a heel kick, she applies the Sickle Hold  but rhythm quickly gets out of it and puts Sumikaba in the rhythm Lock. Sumikaba struggles for a second but has to tap out! rhythm wins the match.

There are fewer bigger sins in professional wrestling than wrestlers breaking up pins/submissions in elimination matches. Unless they are BFFs going into the match, there is no reason for it, it breaks all logic and is an inexcusable wrestling trope. So that alone annoyed me, and nothing they did action-wise overcame that annoyance. Course, a six minute four wrestler elimination match was a tough sell anyway. None of the wrestlers looked particularly bad here but still a skippable match.

Aki Shizuku vs. Tomoka Inaba
Aki Shizuku vs. Tomoka Inaba

This match is the Finals of the Queen of JTO Tournament. Even though I would have liked to have seen a member of Black Army in this spot, it is still a fitting main event. Tomoka Inaba is the home-grown Joshi Ace, but she is still a new wrestler and has a lot of room for growth. Aki Shizuku is a regular in JUST TAP OUT but is a Freelancer, she does have a vast amount of experience but is not a highly ranked wrestler so its not outside the realm of possibility that she’d lose. This will either set up Tomoka as the wrestler to beat, or give her another mountain to climb down the road if she is unable to beat her senior.

They trade holds on the mat to start the match, side headlock takedown by Aki but Tomoka reverses it into a headscissors before both return to their feet. Aki slams Tomoka and goes for a cross armbreaker, but Tomoka quickly rolls to the ropes for the break. Scoop slam by Aki and she hits another one, a third scoop slam by Aki but this one Tomoka blocks and applies an ankle hold. She lets go to slam Aki’s knee repeatedly into the mat, kneelock by Tomoka but Aki gets out of the hold. Kick to the chest by Tomoka and she twists on Aki’s leg before applying the ankle hold. Aki gets to the bottom rope for the break, stomps by Tomoka and she elbows Aki repeatedly in the chest. Pump Kick by Tomoka but Aki fires back with a lariat, Aki picks up Tomoka and gets her on her shoulders to throw her into the corner. Lariat by Aki and she puts Tomoka in a Fujiwara Armbar, she switches to a keylock but Tomoka gets to the ropes. Aki picks up Tomoka and yanks on her arm, she gets Tomoka on her shoulders but Tomoka slides away and hits a Pump Kick.

Tomoka jumps on Aki’s back and applies a sleeper hold, but she lets go to kick Aki repeatedly. PK by Tomoka and she snaps on Aki’s leg before applying a submission hold. Aki gets to the ropes for the break, Tomoka goes off the ropes but Aki blocks the kick. Lariat by Aki but Tomoka kicks her in the head and both wrestlers end up on the mat. Tomoka applies a kneelock but Aki gets out of it and twists on Tomoka’s arm before clubbing her in the back. Aki grabs Tomoka but Tomoka knees her in the head, lariat by Aki and she gets Tomoka up in the Argentine Backbreaker. Tomoka squeezes on Aki’s head to get out of it and puts her in a sleeper hold, but Aki gets away and hits a sliding lariat. Aki picks up Tomoka and hits a lariat, death valley bomb by Aki and she gets Tomoka up in the Argentine Backbreaker. Tomoka is too weak to get out of the hold and has to tap out! Aki Shizuku wins the match and the tournament.

As a side note, I just realized on this entire event there was maybe one or two pin attempts. I know the name of the promotion is JUST TAP OUT but they really seem to embrace that method of winning matches. Anyway, this was fine. Aki is never going to have matches that go beyond a certain level, she is a competent but not an overly exciting wrestler. Tomoka looked ok but I wish she did more to weaken her opponent’s leg as her first leg move was the ankle hold which is also one of her finishing holds. Slam the leg into the ring post, jump on it, do something different to set everything up. The ending stretch was entertaining as I like matches that have a definitive ending, which this one certainly did. A good enough way to end the tournament, but it won’t set the world on fire.  Mildly Recommended

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Misa Kagura https://joshicity.com/joshi-wrestler-profiles/misa-kagura/ Sun, 13 Dec 2020 19:11:39 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?page_id=17904 Profile for Joshi wrestler Misa Kagura.

The post Misa Kagura appeared first on Joshi City.

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Misa Kagura
Birth: September 24th
Height: 5’0″
Weight: 117 lbs.
Background: Trained in JUST TAP OUT
Debut: November 11th, 2020 with Aki Shizuku and rhythm vs. BM, Black R, and Black Changita
Promotions Wrestled For: JUST TAP OUT
Notable Partners: None
Other Identities: None

Championships Held: None
Tournaments Won: None
Awards Won: None

Notable Matches:

  • None

Signature Moves:

  • None

Sample of Matches Reviewed on Joshi City:

  • None

In Action:

Coming Soon

Back to JTO Roster

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