Tuesday, March 31, 2026

BattlARTS History #3 - October 1996

 
Minoru Tanaka vs Katsumi Usuda, 10/2/1996
Not the most exciting shootstyle as neither guy seemed particularily inspired. Thy were rolling on the mat like they were warming up. There were a few good kick combos from Usuda, but it's a BattlARTS match. Tanaka added pretty much nothing.

Minoru Tanaka vs Shoichi Funaki, 10/4/1996
Tanaka hits a big dropkick and kick combo to start but is quickly cut off by a dropkick to the knee from Funaki. We then get a solid 5 or 6 minutes of Funaki working the leg which means he's just slapping on various basic leglocks and Tanaka slowly crawls to the ropes. Tanaka gets the win with a flash armbar at 7 and a half minutes. This is the kind of pro wrestling that really puts you to the test because it makes sense and is executed solid but feels like a complete waste still.


Takeshi Ono & Daisuke Ikeda vs. Yuki Ishikawa & Naohiro Hoshikawa, BattlARTS 10/2/1996 - GREAT

I think the earliest showing of Ikeda and Ono teaming, and they are already a unit. This wasn‘t an all out brawl like many of these matches, but the opening Ikeda/Ishikawa work was tough as nails. These guys locking in submissions look like they‘re trying to bend iron bars. Hoshikawa was solid, and got punched in the face for his troubles by Ono when he tried going for an Irish Whip. Ono and Ikeda eventually cracked up the violence attacking people two on one, Ono kicking people in the face hard and both guys landing some brutal saves. It ended a bit early as Ikeda bloodied Hoshikawas nose and dispatched him like a piece of trash so you didn‘t get a grandstand final, but the match delivered everything you want from Team Taco. 


Daisuke Ikeda & Takeshi Ono vs Katsumi Usuda & Yuki Ishikawa, BattlARTS 10/4/1996

This ones JIP. Not quite as great as you'd hope for given you have 4 of the 5 best guys in the company at this point in the match, but still pretty good BattlARTS style tag action. The shenanigans of Ikeda and Ono were in full effect once again. Mostly ground-based action and at this point their matwork was not yet super exciting, but enough crushing blows and big suplexes to make this a wortwhile quick. It seems Ishikawa had not quite the arsenal yet to really fire back and as such he got KO'd hard after a brief final stand off with Ikeda. Ono was a stiff bastard and relentless on the mat as usual, seemingly never quitting. Usuda was a bit non-descript but he put in the work as always. It seems Team Taco are unstoppable at this point which, sets up their faceoff with Ishikawa and Otsuka at the big Korakuen Hall show later that month nicely.


10/30/1996

 
Tetsuhiro Kuroda vs Satoshi Yoneyama
Two young guys mauling each other hard for 5 minutes and I can get all the way behind that. Yoneyama hits Kuroda with a hard kick barrage right at the go and Kuroda would hit back hard with some really hard elbows and kicks. Kuroda feels very much like a pro wrestler forced to shoot here with the way he locks in a pro wrestling style spinning toe hold and cinches it so hard that it believably forces a rope break and it's a lot of fun. 

Viktor Krüger vs Shoichi Funaki
Krüger was a big austrian guy, who had a background in American football somehow and WCW ambitions at some point. As a transplant to BattlARTS he was super weird and random but they worked their hardest to make it work. This was pretty much a pro wrestling match with Funaki working full on cat and mouse spots, slipping underneath, getting chased, running the ropes. Could've had almost the exact same match on Velocity, like it's hard to imagine Funaki vs Kane being much different. It's fun though as Funaki manages to not look like a chump and even almost submits Krüger a few times. Krüger looked somewhat inept but made it through the match without hiccups.

Carl Malenko vs Katsumi Usuda
Mostly grappling, and they sure do some slick grappling. It could've been a bit better considering how great both guys can be when they're on but that's just a minor complaint when you get 2 beast matworkers grappling it out for 10 minutes. Crowd was really into it too and it's always cool to hear a Korakuen Hall reacting to someone grabbing a heel hook. Their best match so far?!

TAKA Michinoku vs Minoru Tanaka
The conclusion to their year-long rivalry! Some really good fireworks at the end here with some great submission nearfalls, a few violent shotai rushes from Tanaka and both guys trying to crunch each others necks with snatched Michinoku Drivers and big suplexes. Still I thought shorter matches suit them better at this point, as it felt like not a ton happened in the first 10 minutes as it was just rather tentative unspectacular work. Still for 'epic' feeling this might be your match just for it's length and build, even though their earlier matches have been more compact. Still I love how the crowd flips out for even a basic toe hold counter, and there's s great finish here with a perfect execution of how to do a sleeper.

Takeshi Ono & Daisuke Ikeda vs. Yuki Ishikawa & Alexander Otsuka (BattlARTS 10/30/1996) - EPIC

Okay, everybody knows this match is amazing. In context, it's pretty much the quintessence of what BattlARTS had been doing that year, so it was a suitable main event to their first Korakuen Hall show. Ikeda and Ono were an amazing pair of absolute pricks here, really upping the heel tactics they've in part displayed before up to 11 and trying to stomp Ishikawa and Otsuka to a paste. Right at the start they double team Ishikawa pasting him with kicks and cutting off the ring to isolate him while he busts out cool mat counters to defend himself. Ishikawa and Otsuka in turn took insane beatings and retaliated with some insane suplexes and a few choice revenge spots. In between that they do lots of really gritty feeling matwork. It really felt on a different level to shootstyle tag-wrestling up to that point. There was one bit that resembled modern MMA where Ono kept stopping Otsukas takedown attempts and trying to scramble his brains with super violent kicks. I don't have to tell you that all the Ishikawa/Ikeda exchanges were just glorious brutality. Some of the hardest stuff they ever did, and their last exchange was just mental, full on punches do the face, Ikeda hitting these crazy back kick while upside down, it was hatred embodied. Ishikawa wasn't quite the full-on Inoki worshipper yet and he kept doing those Jimmy Snuka jumping headbutts. Otsuka has these really awesome moments of explosive hot tags where he just runs in and snatches and dumps somebody on their head right off the bat, he was a suplex monster in this. Just like Ishikawa/Ikeda had their dynamic he has this dynamic with Takeshi Ono, who spends most of the fight on the apron waiting to sneak in and kick somebody in the eye to break a submission. Otsuka pummeling Ono around was pretty great and when he hits that big giant swing it's just transcendental. When Ono actually was in the ring, we got to see either his slick skinny ratboy grappling or his reckless kicks. We also get to see what Ishikawa is really about as later in the match he gets his comeuppance hooking one nastier and nastier submission on Ikeda. What a quintessential piece of 90s wrestling greatness, up there with your high end AJPW tags or Michinoku Pro multimans or FMW explosion deathmatches, just a snapshot of a totally unique point in time with these dudes just going all out on the mat, this is what BattlARTS really was all about. And man their final showdown is just pure undistillated face punching goodness. Awesome matwork, big suplexes, intrigueing tag psychology, all-time brutality, just one of the sickest matches ever.

The Show Library

Complete Takeshi Ono 

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BattlARTS History #3 - October 1996

  Minoru Tanaka vs Katsumi Usuda, 10/2/1996 Not the most exciting shootstyle as neither guy seemed particularily inspired. Thy were rolling ...