Superstar Sleeze Posted December 22, 2015 Report Share Posted December 22, 2015 IWGP Intercontinental Champion Shinsuke Nakamura vs Kota Ibushi - Wrestle Kingdom 9 Shinsuke Nakamura's entrance was Five Fucking Stars! Wow! Hearing Jim Ross' voice out of nowhere was wicked jarring. I forgot he and Striker did this match. It was weird they felt like they were reviewing the match as smart marks rather than as announcers. It was not too distracting, but there were times were both were grating. I may be in the minority, but I prefer Japanese commentary in Japanese matches. There is a certain rhythm the Japanese commentators have with the wrestlers that just works so well. The story of the match is one that I always dig and that is the young, pretty boy trying to prove he can hang with the grizzled vet. Ibushi did a great job varying his attack between fighting fire with fire and working his own game. Ibushi proved here he could hang with the hardest hitter in New Japan as he gave as good as he got with some blistering strikes. Those chops and kicks from him had me ooooohhhh and aaaaahhing as much as those ones from the King of Strong Style. At the same time, he knew if he wanted to win the match he was going to have to rely on what brought him to the dance namely his high flying arsenal, which wowed as much as it did damage. The extra element I really appreciated from Ibushi was his ability to combat Nakamura in gamesmanship. By mocking Nakamura's eccentricities, it added an extra level of chippiness and personal hate that took a great match and made it a classic. Nakamura is a license to print money. He is so over with the Japanese audience. He is a far cry from the apathetic wrestler of the late 2000s. He actually has been able to channel that apathy into a cockiness that people including myself really enjoy. As much fun as he is, he knows when to get down to business. I think he played the grizzled veteran perfectly in this match. When Ibushi mocked his jerky leg in the corner, he made him pay with an onslaught of knees. Nakamura was a great counter wrestler in the 2000s and here it is on full display against the speedy Ibushi using a ground to air missile dropkick to drop Ibushi out of the sky. I thought the beginning of the match did have its flat moments mostly resulting from a lack of struggle. Nakamura ran through his badass knee strikes and then Ibushi used a hurricanarana to keep Nakamura off balance, but that came right after he took a backstabber. The selling and flow just was not always there. The offense was top notch, but there was a bit of let me be ragdoll for you and then you will be a ragdoll for me. The last 5-8 minutes was absolutely world class professional wrestling. When Ibushi missed the Phoenix Splash, Nakamura nailed the Boma Ye knee to the back of the head, but he collapsed to the mat. At this point of the match, I thought the drama in the match went through the roof and never came back down. I love the spot of Ibushi going for the high risk home run, crashing & burning and Nakamura immediately capitalizing with his home run shot. It was a perfect way to level the playing field. Nakamura just started to whip some serious ass and when Ibushi started to fire up you could feel him becoming a man before your eyes. Their strike exchanges were not the boring stand there and let me hit you. They were fighting through each other's stuff. I don't love simultaneous punches, but holy shit did they pull it off perfectly! Really the best use of that spot ever. Also, this match featured a really great use of the rare closed fist. Ibushi was tired of Nakamura's shit and he started to wailing on him. Nakamura shoved the ref into Ibushi, which allowed him to deck Ibushi with a straight right. What a dick and what a great spot. I love Japanese punches because they look like match enders and are treated as such! Ibushi's flying double stomp to a running Nakamura was insane. Then in the climax of the match Ibushi mocks Nakamura's mannerisms in the corner before nailing the Boma Ye knee and Nakamura kicked out. It was just so perfect. You know that Ibushi has the confidence and he can hang with Nakamura, but he just is not there yet. They over reach on a neat in your head, but not in practice move with Ibushi trying to German Suplex Nakamura over the top rope while standing on the top rope. That was Ibushi's big false finish, before Nakamura roared back with a pair of Boma Ye Knees. Absolutely fantastic finish run. Nakamura looked like the best wrestler in the world with his offense and mannerisms. Ibushi proved that he was not just a high flyer and that he could hang in a stand up contest and he had the balls to mock the biggest star in the company. I was not in love with the beginning of the match and I think there have been better matches in 2015, but this was great. ****1/4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loss Posted December 22, 2015 Report Share Posted December 22, 2015 I really have a tough time getting into Nakamura for reasons that I'll explain more as I start watching some of his matches soon. Last time I watched this, I just couldn't get into it, which I'll admit is odd considering the virtually universal praise for this match. I think the big issue for me is his flailing execution. Nothing he does really looks very crisp to me. It's not the Terry Funk brand of organized chaos either, it's more that he doesn't seem like a wrestler in command of what he's doing. He almost strikes me as Edge, but with stiff offense. It's an opinion I need to flesh out more, and for all I know, I may watch this match and some others soon and wonder why I ever thought that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Superstar Sleeze Posted December 22, 2015 Author Report Share Posted December 22, 2015 It definitely took me a while to get him. I guess I see him more like Terry Funk than you do. I am definitely in the minority (maybe the only person alive) that prefers Tanahashi to him hands down. I just watched Tanahashi's match with Ibushi from this year's G-1 Climax and thought it was better than more pimped 1/4 match. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
donsem43 Posted December 27, 2015 Report Share Posted December 27, 2015 I always thought that Nakamura's flailing was part of his rock/pop star gimmick, he's just the type of guy who just over-exaggerates when he preforms. Overall, I thought the match was great although it does drag the whole mock/one-up each other stuff was played out and not need towards the end of the match. It worked in the early going as it seem that Nakamura's strategy was to get Ibushi to lose his temper but he never did. The action was fantastic when they were going right at one another and trying to find way to avoid/counter each other's stuff. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loss Posted January 5, 2016 Report Share Posted January 5, 2016 I just rewatched this and Nakamura clicked with me a lot more this time around. I think the issue the first time was that I didn't understand his offense very well so it wasn't clear that he was actually going for a move instead of just having a spastic event. So yeah, I thought this was a classic, and I liked how they made use of Ibushi's tremendous athleticism to build a strong match. Not a lot of excess to be found here, as is the criticism I hear a lot of for New Japan in general. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kronos Posted January 6, 2016 Report Share Posted January 6, 2016 Just starting the match. But I have to say it felt really weird when I realized not only that the commentary is in English - but that it's friggin JR??!! Weird. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Superstar Sleeze Posted January 7, 2016 Author Report Share Posted January 7, 2016 English commentary through me for a loop. Call me crazy, but I prefer Japanese commentary for Japanese matches. The cadence and rhythm follows the action a lot better even if I can only understand the occasional "DAAAANNNNGGGGEERRRROOOUS!" or "BRAAAAAINBBBBBUSTER"!I probably should watch this match again. I tend to underrate the very first match of a style that I am getting back into because I forget all the nuances to look for. Still a great match, but I just didn't see as the classic everyone else made it out to be. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SmartMark15 Posted January 6, 2018 Report Share Posted January 6, 2018 This match held up much better on my rewatch. Nakamura on absolute point with his offensive here, just going crazy on this kid trying to take his spot. Ibushi mocking Nakamura was amazing and the way they respond to each other because of those taunts is a wonder. Fantastic match here. ***** Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShittyLittleBoots Posted December 28, 2018 Report Share Posted December 28, 2018 Loved the mental games throughout, and the match kicks into a high gear that never goes away once Ibushi counters Nakamura's Boma Ye attempt w/ a high kick. After that it's just fireworks. ****3/4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cactus Posted July 22, 2020 Report Share Posted July 22, 2020 Nakamura weird charisma and mannerisms works exceptionally well for a big dome audience and Ibushi is a plucky underdog who fights with his heart and not his brain. Trading strikes with Nakamura is not a good idea, Ibushi. You beautiful idiot. Nakamura gradually heeling it up once he realises that Ibushi isn't going down was when this match really took off, with Nakamura having to pulverise the poor boy with strikes and even bust out a rare Landslide. I still prefer Nakamura's match with Sakuraba a few years previous, but you really can't go wrong with a Nakamura dome match. ★★★★¼ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wahoos Leg Posted January 5, 2022 Report Share Posted January 5, 2022 This has all the athleticism and drama you see in a 2020s New Japan "epic", but it's packed into a more digestible 20 minutes. All killer, no filler, and a fantastic example of pro wrestling as sport blended with art. Read my full review of this match, as part of my 365 Wrestling project. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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