Real Japan Debut Show
Date: June 9th, 2005
Location: Tokyo Korakuen Hall
Announced Attendance: 1,628
Now this is a fun. Real Japan is a small independent
Japanese promotion started by Super Tiger, aka Tiger Mask I, aka Satoru
Sayama. It has had a few shows since June and like most independent
promotions uses a lot of wrestlers from other smaller promotions.
Since Sayama is hardcore into karate and other forms of martial arts,
there were other matches on the show that were not professional wrestling.
On this show there were four professional wrestling and three karate
fights as well. Here are the professional wrestling matches on
the card:
- Kagetora vs. Rasse
- Alexander Otsuka and Kei Sato vs. Masao Orihara and Junji Tanaka
- Mango Fukuda, Pineapple Hanai, and Minamino vs. The Tiger II, Taiji
Ishimori, and Shu Sato
- Super Tiger vs. Shinjiro Ohtani
Since most of these names will be new to many of you, I'll list what
promotions they normally wrestle in so that if you enjoy their work
you can find more events with their participation.
Kagetora vs. Rasse
Both of these masked wrestlers are a part of Michinoku Pro.
They struggle for position to start the match, with neither man giving
in. Waistlock by Kagetora, reversed by Rasse, but Kagetora reverses
it back into a waistlock. Takedown by Kagetora, but Rasse applies
a reverse headlock. Kagetora struggles to his feet, but Rasse
maintains an armbar. Arm wringer by Rasse, but Kagetora reverses
it into an arm wringer of his own. Kagetora reverses that into
a hammerlock, Rasse tries to elbow out of it, but Kagetora pushes him
to the mat. Kagetora applies an arm submission on the mat and
then changes it into a side headlock. Rasse reverses it with a
headscissors, Kagetora springs out of it, and both men are back on their
feet again. Tie-up, Kagetora pushes Rasse into the corner and
gives a clean break. Tie-up again, side headlock by Kagetora,
Rasse Irish whips out of it, but Kagetora shoulderblocks him down.
Kagetora goes off the ropes again, but this time Rasse trips him up.
Rasse runs to the ropes now, leapfrog by Kagetora, Rasse avoids the
monkey flip and hurricanranas Kagetora out of the ring. Rasse
goes to take a dive, but Kagetora moves so Rasse flips himself back
into the ring before going over the top rope. Kagetora eventually
returns to the ring, knee to the gut by Rasse and he hits a chop.
Kagetora chops him back and the two exchange blows. They start
trading forearm shots, Kagetora goes off the ropes and floors Rasse
with a flying forearm smash. Kick by Kagetora and he applies a
reverse chinlock on the mat. Kagetora applies a stretch hold on
Rasse, cover, but Rasse kicks out at one. Kagetora picks up Rasse,
snapmare, and he dropkicks Rasse right in the face. Cover, but
it gets a two count. Kagetora picks up Rasse, goes for a vertical
suplex, Rasse lands on his feet and goes off the ropes, but Kagetora
catches him with a spinebuster. Cover, but again it gets two.
Kagetora throws Rasse into the corner and hits a series of chops.
Irish whip, reversed, Rasse charges Kagetora, but Kagetora moves and
Rasse lands on the apron. From the apron,
Rasse
slingshots himself into the ring, springboards off the second rope in
the corner and hits a moonsault on Kagetora. Rasse dropkicks
Kagetora out of the ring and sails out himself onto Kagetora with a
corkscrew plancha suicida. Rasse gets up first, throws Kagetora
into the ring, and hits a springboard missile dropkick from the apron.
Rasse goes for a body scissors, but Kagetora catches him and throws
him off. Now Kagetora goes off the ropes, but Rasse catches him
with a back kick to the stomach. Off the ropes again, Rasse goes
for another body scissors, and this time hits a facebuster. Cover,
but it only gets a two count. Rasse picks up Kagetora in a back
suplex position and drops him on his head. Cover by Rasse, but
again it gets two. Rasse signals he is going for the finish, he
scoop slams Kagetora in front of the corner and goes up top, but Kagetora
rolls out of the way of the 450 Splash. Slap by Kagetora, Irish
whip from the corner and he hits a jumping back elbow. Flying
clothesline by Kagetora, he waits for Rasse to get back up, goes off
the ropes, and hits a running enzigieri followed
by
a modified Simonizer (dropping him in front of his body instead of to
the side). Cover by Kagetora, but Rasse kicks out at two.
Kagetora drags Rasse to his feet, dumps him in front of the corner,
goes up top, and hits the big elbow drop. Cover, but again it
only gets a two count. Again Kagetora picks up Rasse, goes off
the ropes, Rasse ducks the attack and goes for a backslide, but Kagetora
rolls through and clotheslines Rasse hard to the mat. Kagetora
gets Rasse up and delivers his Ikkitousen. Cover, and Kagetora
picks up the three count! Your winner: Kagetora
Match Thoughts: A nice opener. Both
are popular wrestlers from Michinoku Pro and they have worked together
many times before, thus they clicked very well. Rasse and Kagetora
hit their spots almost flawlessly, but naturally they couldn't go "all
out" since they were at the beginning of the card. Kagetora's
finisher is impressive looking, and overall I was pleasantly surprised
with the match. With small independent promotions you don't always
know what you will get, but this match was perfectly watchable although
not spectacular. Score: 6.0
Alexander Otsuka and Kei Sato vs. Masao Orihara and
Junji Tanaka
Tanaka charges Otsuka to start the match and throws him out of the ring
while Orihara knocks Sato to the mat. Sato regains the advantage
inside the ring and dropkicks Orihara in the face. Irish whip,
but Orihara blocks the hiptoss and flings him to the mat. Sato
is double teamed, double Irish whip, and he is knocked down with a double
chop. Tanaka hits a senton, but Otsuka comes back in the ring
to try to help. He gets beat down as well, double Irish whip,
but he ducks the double clothesline and clotheslines both men down.
Otsuka goes over to Tanaka and press slams him out of the ring while
Sato Irish whips Orihara into the corner and hits a kick. Otsuka
follows with a belly to belly overhead suplex on Orihara, he picks Orihara
back up, holds him for Sato, and Sato hits a double springboard kick
from the corner. Cover, but it only gets a two count. Sato
throws Orihara into the corner and tags in Otsuka. Club to the
back by Otsuka, he applies a waistlock, but Orihara grabs the top rope
and kicks him low. Orihara tags in Tanaka, who clubs Otsuka in
the back. Snapmare, and he kicks Otsuka in the back and then hits
a kneedrop. Cover, but it only gets a two count. Headbutt
by Otsuka, and he tags in Sato. Double Irish whip by Otsuka and
Sato, and they hit a double elbow. Cover, but it gets another
two. Sato hits a series of kicks to Tanaka's head, another cover,
but Tanaka kicks out. A stretch submission is applied by Sato,
but Tanaka makes it to the ropes and Sato breaks the hold. Sato
tags Otsuka back in, and he forearms Tanaka in the back. Snap
suplex by Otsuka, cover, but it gets a two count. Otsuka chops
Tanaka in the chest, but Tanaka returns fire. Eye rake by Tanaka,
he goes off the ropes and kicks Otsuka in the head. Tanaka hits
a knee strike, cover, but it gets a two count. Clubs to the back
by Tanaka and he throws Otsuka into the corner. Irish whip by
Tanaka, reversed, but Tanaka gets his foot up when Otsuka charges and
hits a bulldog from the top turnbuckle. Tanaka picks up Otsuka,
hits a Rock Bottom, cover, but it gets a two count. Samoan Drop
by Tanaka, and he tags in Orihara, who comes in the ring off the top
turnbuckle with a missile dropkick. Cover by Orihara, but Otsuka
kicks out. Waistlock by Orihara, but Otsuka reverses it and tags
in Sato. Kicks by Sato to the stomach and he hits a flurry of
strikes on Orihara. Orihara absorbs the blows though and slaps
Sato hard in the face. Orihara drops an elbow on Tanaka's leg,
cover, but it gets a two count. Orihara tags in Tanaka, and Tanaka
kicks Sato in the stomach. Cover, but Sato kicks out. Tanaka
picks up Sato, scoop slam, and he drops the leg across Sato's neck.
Cover, but it gets a two count. Tanaka scoop slams Sato in front
of the corner and Orihara comes off the top with a double stomp.
Tanaka hen goes up top and hits the same thing, cover by Orihara, but
again it gets a two count. Orihara kicks Sato repeatedly in the
head and knocks him down with a clothesline. Cover, but Otsuka
breaks it up. Orihara slams Sato into three turnbuckles, Tanaka
comes off the top turnbuckle with a dropkick, cover by Orihara, but
it gets a two count. Leg drop by Orihara, another cover, but Otsuka
breaks it up. Orihara picks up Sato in a piledriver position and
holds him for a good 30 seconds before finally driving him to the mat.
Cover, but Sato barely kicks out. Orihara elbows Otsuka off the
apron, Tanaka comes in the ring, double Irish whip to the corner, Orihara
hits a clothesline, but when Orihara gets on all fours for Tanaka to
catapult off his back, Sato charges out of the corner and dropkicks
the charging Tanaka. Neckbreaker by Sato on Orihara and he hits
a series of kicks on Tanaka. He is too tired to make the tag though,
and Orihara kicks Sato in the head. Headbutt by Orihara, cocky
cover, and it gets a two count. Orihara picks up Sato, and with
Tanaka on the top turnbuckle they hit a spike piledriver. Cover,
but Otsuka breaks it up. Tanaka kicks Otsuka out of the ring,
Irish whip by Orihara to the corner, and he hits a running clothesline.
Orihara puts Sato on the top turnbuckle, hits a spider suplex and then
nails a moonsault. Cover, but Otsuka breaks it up. Tanaka
again comes in the throw Otsuka out of the ring while Orihara Irish
whips Sato in the ring and hits the Complete Shot.
Cover
by Orihara, but Sato barely kicks out. Orihara drags Sato to his
feet and hits a running powerbomb. Cover, but Otsuka breaks it
up. Otsuka hits a German suplex on Orihara and then hits one on
Tanaka as well. Otsuka picks up Orihara, headbutts him, and
nails a deadweight release German suplex. Tanaka hits Otsuka
low though, goes to his corner, and Orihara tags him in. Tanaka
kicks Sato in the back, Irish whip by Tanaka, but Sato kicks him in
the stomach. Sato goes for a Tornado DDT from the corner, but
Tanaka throws him off. Irish whip by Tanaka to the corner, but
Sato jumps up on the second rope and this time delivers the Tornado
DDT. This gives him time to make the hot tag to Otsuka, Irish
whip by Otsuka on Tanaka, reversed, but Otsuka ducks the clothesline
and hits a savate kick. Reverse chinlock by Otsuka, but Tanaka
hits a jawbreaker to get out of it. Knee to the gut by Tanaka
and he kicks Otsuka
against
the ropes. Irish whip, Tanaka hits a few more kicks, but Otsuka
finally catches one and hits a dragon screw leg whip. Otsuka gives
Tanaka the 'ol Giant Swing and then sits down with a single leg crab
hold. Orihara breaks it up with a kick to the head, but Sato comes
in and dropkicks him out of the ring. Sato then bounces off the
far ropes and goes over the top rope with a somersault tope suicida
on Orihara. In the ring, Otsuka has a modified Camel Clutch applied,
but Tanaka makes it to the ropes. Otsuka drags Tanaka to his
feet, nails the SSD, and covers him for the three count pinfall.
Your winners: Alexander Otsuka and Kei Sato
Match Thoughts: The match wasn't bad, but
I didn't particularly like the layout. My main problem was that
after working up to the hot tag for most of the match, the hot tag ended
up meaningless as within 20 seconds of getting in the ring Otsuka applied
a reverse chinlock and was knocked out with a jawbreaker, thus shifting
momentum back. I occasionally complain about the Tag Team Formula,
but there are times that it makes sense. If the story of the match
is Sato trying to get to the corner to tag Otsuka, you would think that
Otsuka would kick some ass once he finally got in the ring, but that
didn't happen here. Yes, he eventually got the pinfall, but only
after another change in momentum. Besides that the action was
crisp, but Orihara is one weird looking dude. The SSD is a cool
finisher, not sure if I have seen that move done before. So it
wasn't unwatchable, but it just came up flat to me with the non-hot
hot tag at the end of the match. Score: 4.4
Mango Fukuda, Pineapple Hanai, and Takeshi Minamino
vs The Tiger II, Taiji Ishimori, and Shu Sato
Minamino and Ishimori start things off. They jockey for position
to start with neither man getting the advantage. Finally Ishimori
gets a waistlock on Minamino, but Minamino reverses it and goes for
the leg of Ishimori. Ishimori goes for a front facelock, but Minamino
reverses it with an arm wringer. Ishimori applies an arm wringer
of his own, but Minamino makes it to the ropes and Ishimori gives a
clean break. Kick to the stomach by Minamino, he goes for a snapmare,
but Ishimori lands on his feet. Minamino goes for a big boot,
Ishimori slides under it, Ishimori goes off the ropes and does a quebrada,
Minamino moves, but Ishimori lands on his feet. Now Minamino goes
off the ropes and he hits a shoulderblock. From the mat, Ishimori
does a kip-up hurricanrana and dropkicks Minamino out of the ring.
Ishimori goes for a dive, but Minamino moves, so Ishimori swings himself
back in the ring and tags in Sato. Fukuda is tagged in as well
by Minamino. Sato goes for a front waistlock, but Fukuda flings
him to the amt. Now Sato goes for the leg, but Fukuda clubs him
in the back and applies a side headlock. Irish whip by Sato, but
Fukuda shoulderblocks him down. Fukuda goes off the ropes, leapfrog
by Sato, and he catches him with a quick hurricanrana before kicking
him out of the ring. Sato goes to do a dive, but instead tags
in Tiger. Hanai comes in as well, Test of Strength, and Hanai
gets Tiger to his knees. Tiger rolls backwards to reverse the
hold however and hits a spinning headscissors. A second spinning
headscissors gets Hanai to stay down and Hanai has to get a foot on
the rope to break the hold. Tiger hits a series of kicks, Irish
whip, and he nails a dropkick. Tiger tosses Hanai in the corner,
but Hanai collapses on impact. Snapmare by Tiger and he stomps
Hanai in the head before applying a leg submission hold. Tiger
tags in Sato, who comes off the top rope with an ax handle. Kicks
by Sato, Irish whip, but Hanai holds onto the ropes to avoid the dropkick
and tags in Minamino. Minamino hits a series of kicks and punches
Sato down to the mat. Snapmare by Minamino and he kicks Sato in
the back. Minamino tags in Fukuda, who hits a dropkick on Sato.
Club to the back by Fukuda and he chops Sato down. Cover, but
it gets a two count. Fukuda drags Sato back to his own corner
and makes the tag to Hanai. Chops by Hanai against the ropes,
Irish whip, and hits a side slam while Fukuda runs in and helps drive
Sato to the mat. Cover by Hanai, but it only gets a two count.
Fireman's carry slam by Hanai and he applies a single leg crab hold
while his teammates hold back The Tiger and Ishimori. Hanai eventually
releases the hold and goes for a back suplex, Sato lands on his feet
and lunges for the corner, but Hanai tackles him before he can get there.
Hanai picks up Sato and chops him back down before tagging in Minamino.
Kick to the gut by Minamino and he throws Sato into the corner.
Irish whip by Minamino from the corner, but Sato reverses it and hits
a diving forearm smash. Minamino comes charging out of the corner
though with
a
strike of his own, goes off the ropes, but Sato catches his clothesline
attempt and kicks him in the back of the head. This gives Sato
time to tag in Ishimori, how comes in the ring with a springboard dropkick.
Hanai comes in, but Ishimori nails a handstand springboard elbow
strike before giving Fukuda a nice overhead kick (this is how you
do a hot tag). Ishimori tags in Tiger, Irish whip by Tiger on
Minamino, and he hits a spinning backbreaker. Hanai runs over
to Tiger, so he gets a spinning backbreaker as well. It's Fukuda's
turn now, but Tiger can't get Fukuda over so he hits a combination of
kicks instead, knocking Fukuda to the mat. Tiger picks up Fukuda
and goes for the Tiger Suplex, but it is broken up and all six men come
in the ring. Tiger gives Fukuda a back bodydrop, Irish whip, but
Fukuda knees Tiger in the stomach. Fukuda goes for a piledriver,
but Tiger reverses it with a hurricanrana for a two count. Tiger
ducks a clothesline and goes for Fukuda's neck, but Hanai and Minamino
run in to break it up. Sato comes in and knees Minamino, while
in the ring Hanai delivers a hurricanrana to Ishimori for a close two
count. Hanai hits the Nameless on Ishimori, cover, but again it
gets a two count. Hanai calls for the finish, picks up Ishimori,
Irish whip to the corner, but Ishimori gets a boot up when he charges
and Sato adds a kick of his own. 619 by Ishimori to Hanai and
he nails the Superstar Elbow. Cover, but the pin attempt is broken
up. Another brawl breaks out, with Sato and Minamino trading blows
in the ring. Sato kicks Minamino to the mat before picking him
up and hitting more kicks. Sato hits an Unprettier, cover, but
Minamino kicks out. Sato goes for another kick, but finally Minamino
catches his leg and delivers a German suplex hold that gets a two count
before it is broken up. Tiger and Ishimori are tossed from the
ring, leaving Sato to be triple teamed. A
Fukuda
lariat gets a two count, he picks Sato back up and nails a brainbuster.
Cover, but it is broken up. Tiger throws Minamino out of the ring
and hits a man-sized Asai Moonsault, slightly over-shooting Minamino
and landing in the crowd. In the ring, Sato ducks a Fukuda
clothesline and rolls him up for two, but Fukuda quickly fires back
with another clothesline. Fukuda goes to the top turnbuckle, comes
off with the Final Flash!, and gets the three count pinfall. Your
winners: Mango Fukuda, Pineapple Hanai, and Takeshi Minamino
Match Thoughts: Mango Fukuda, Pineapple Hanai,
and Takeshi Minamino were all a part of Toryumon X and still wrestle
around independent promotions. Sato is the twin brother of the
Sato that wrestled in the last match. The Tiger 2 is better known
as Ultimo Dragon, and Ishimori has wrestled this year (2005) in All
Japan. Now that I have that out of the way, this match was a real
cluster, but a fun cluster. As I playfully pointed out, Ishimori's
"hot tag" was far superior to Otsuka's hot tag in the last
match, and even more surprisingly Ishimori did not botch a single move
in the entire match. Actually he looked pretty good, as did all
the wrestlers. And I must admit to slightly marking out at watching
The Tiger do the Asai Moonsault, even if he did attempt to kill himself
in the process. Los Salseros Japoneses looked good as well and
function great as a team since they have tagged so much together in
the past. The end really broke down though, and after the hot
tag there wasn't any real rhyme or reason to the match. It was
just a series of spots until the final move. Still it was fun
to watch, even if it was lacking substance at times. Score:
6.3
Super Tiger vs. Shinjiro Ohtani
Super Tiger sneaks in a few slaps to start the match, but Ohtani takes
him down and applies an armbar on the mat. Ohtani goes for a cross
armbreaker, but Super Tiger links his arms and rolls out of it.
Both men are back on their
feet,
Super Tiger hits a series of kicks and then a beautiful (especially
considering his age and weight) twisting leg scissors takedown.
Super Tiger applies a leg submission hold, but Ohtani gets a hand on
the ropes and Super Tiger releases the hold. Ohtani gets back
to his feet, but eats more kicks
from Super Tiger. Super Tiger punches Ohtani in the corner and
hits a spinning heel kick. Ohtani rolls out of the ring, Super
Tiger goes for a dive, but sees Ohtani might move and swings back inside
before sailing out with a pescado. Super Tiger gets back
in the ring first and Ohtani eventually follows him in. Kicks
to the leg by Super Tiger, but Ohtani catches one of the kicks and fires
back with kicks of his own. Ohtani stomps Super Tiger down in
the corner and gives Super Tiger some boot scrapes followed by a running
boot scrape to the head. Ohtani picks up Super Tiger and charges
him, but Super Tiger avoids the kick and goes off the ropes. Super
Tiger flips out of an attempted back bodydrop and kicks Ohtani stiffly
in the shoulder followed by a kick straight to the head. Knee
drop by Super Tiger and he applies an inverted cross armbreaker.
After a minute Ohtani makes it to the ropes and Super Tiger gives a
break. Stomps and kicks by Super Tiger and he drops an elbow on
Ohtani's head. Super Tiger applies a key lock while pinning Ohtani,
but Ohtani reverses it with a headscissors. Ohtani reverts the
move into a cross armbreaker, but Super Tiger quickly makes it to the
ropes. Ohtani is reluctant to let go, but eventually does so.
Stomps by Ohtani, he picks up Super Tiger and throws him into the corner.
Ohtani slaps Super Tiger in the corner, but Super Tiger returns fire
and kicks Ohtani against the ropes. Irish whip by Super Tiger
and he delivers a diving double chop to Ohtani's chest. Super
Tiger picks up Ohtani and nails a tombstone piledriver. Cover,
but Ohtani barely kicks out. Super Tiger goes to the top turnbuckle
and delivers a diving headbutt to Ohtani. Cover, but again Ohtani
kicks out. Super Tiger goes up top again, but Ohtani rolls out
of the way of the moonsault, goes up top himself, and hits a missile
dropkick to Super Tiger's back. Ohtani goes off the ropes, but
Super Tiger catches him with a back kick and hits a DDT. Super
Tiger kicks Ohtani in the head while he is on one knee and hits a double
kneedrop. Cover, but it only gets a two count. Super Tiger
drags Ohtani to his feet, but Ohtani drives him back into the corner
and hits a spinning heel kick. Slap by Ohtani, but Super Tiger
grabs him and applies a cross armbreaker. Ohtani manages to get
a foot on the bottom rope, and both men slowly struggle to their feet.
Slap by Ohtani, he applies a cobra hold, and Super Tiger quickly taps
out! Your winner: Shinjiro Ohtani
Match Thoughts: I wanted to enjoy this match,
considering I have a lot of respect for both wrestlers, but it came
off flat in a lot of ways and didn't come across as the main event for
the debut show. As I mentioned above, Super Tiger was formally
known as the original Tiger Mask, and Ohtani is one of the leaders of
Zero-One MAX. Super Tiger looked pretty good at what he did, even
though he has put on weight since his glory years, but not a lot happened
in this match. The trading of submission holds was fine, but the
ending seemed to come out of nowhere and the earlier submissions did
not seem to play much of a part in the ending. Super Tiger had
been in control, had just applied a cross armbreaker, but Ohtani sneaks
in a submission.... and Super Tiger is tapping out almost before the
hold is even locked in. The match was also quite short, clocking
in at 10 minutes and it was actually the shortest professional wrestling
match on the show. It wasn't a bad match, but it lacked the punch
that we have seen in the other matches on the card. Score:
5.5
Final Thoughts:
With only four professional wrestling matches on the card
and none of them great, it is hard to recommend this show. I will
admit that it was fun seeing Super Tiger and The Tiger 2, since they
are old favorites of mine and don't work the main promotions much (if
at all), but that alone doesn't make the event worth purchasing.
The Michinoku Pro guys were all solid though, and no one on this event
seemed out of place. If you like MMA/karate and can get the full
show, then it would probably be worth the purchase. If you are
only a fan of professional wrestling though, I'd suggest picking up
a Michinoku Pro or Zero-One MAX show if you are in the mood for something
different instead of this event.
Not Recommended
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