Saturday, July 9, 2016

G1 Climax 25 Nights Three and Four Review

G1 Climax 25 Nights Three and Four
Night Three (Block A)
July 24th, 2015 | Kyoto, Japan | Attendance: 1,700
Night Four (Block B)
July 25th, 2015 | Takamatsu, Japan | Attendance: 2,070


The first two nights of the tournament proved to be a mixed bag. The guys you expected to deliver did and the guys you usually don’t expect much from didn’t, outside of Michael Elgin who was damn good. Hopefully, there is some upswing on this next set, though they aren’t the strongest of cards.

Block A
Doc Gallows (0) vs. Kota Ibushi (0)

Clearly, both guys lost their first matches. Doc Gallows got to be the monster heel thanks to his size advantage. I don’t think he takes enough advantage of that usually but he did well here. At one point he just lifted Ibushi on the apron and dumped him hard outside. Ibushi did a great job selling for Gallows throughout. He busted out a Pele like kick to and moonsault to the outside. He showed off some more of his impressive power with a German that got a near fall. They botched a rana spot but recovered nicely as it led to Ibushi rolling through for the 1-2-3.

Winner: Kota Ibushi (2) in 8:35
Better than I remember it being. Gallows was really solid as the big heel and Ibushi did one of his better sell jobs throughout. They even managed to fix their mistake at the end. ***

Block B
Tomohiro Ishii (2) vs. Yujiro Takahashi (0)

Takahashi’s lady tonight was pretty fantastic, doing a bunch of splits before the bell. He did the expected stuff, like attack Ishii early and use Cody Hall at ringside to his advantage. Again, I get that Takahashi is a heel, but his offense is mostly dull. He works over faces and it always just feels like it lasts forever. It’s also odd to see him in such control against guys like Ishii and Goto, who are much higher on the card than he is. After what seemed like the longest time, Ishii put him down with a Brainbuster.

Winner: Tomohiro Ishii (4) in 12:17
Far too long for something that saw Takahashi in control. He really can be dreadful at times. Ishii’s comeback was fun enough to save this. **¼

Block A
Bad Luck Fale (0) vs. Togi Makabe (2)

I’ll never understand why Fale has a shirt that says Under Boss, but has the Boss backwards. Is he the UNDERSSOB? I liked the idea of this matchup because, while Fale always has the size advantage, Makabe is known as a badass dude that could still take it to him. We got the trademark G1 countout tease after they fought in the crowd for a bit. Once inside, Fale wore down Makabe. Makabe powered up and started laying into Fale. They blocked some of the key offense from each other near the end. Fale scored on a spear and then won via Bad Luck Fall.

Winner: Bad Luck Fale (2) in 8:06
Pretty much what I wanted from these two. Go out and have a back and forth brawl that doesn’t overstay its welcome. That’s exactly what they did. **½

Block B
Michael Elgin (0) vs. Satoshi Kojima (0)

Considering his night one performance and Kojima’s penchant for good, hard hitting matches, I was pretty pumped for this matchup. They came out of the blocks firing and hammering away on each other. The pace of this match was great as everything flowed nicely and it didn’t go on for too long. The G1 is perfect for Elgin because he can stick to the good stuff that he does in the shorter matches, rather than trying to work 30 minute “classics” like he does in ROH too often. He got in his stuff, while Kojima had the crowd firmly in his corner, giving it a good atmosphere. Kojima got free of a few big moves before they fought up top. Kojima fell off, but caught a flying Elgin with a lariat to win.

Winner: Satoshi Kojima (2) in 12:49
A good battle between two tough dudes. Kojima has become my favorite of the older generation of guys in these tournaments and Elgin has been really good in his two outings. I liked the idea of the finish but it did come off looking like they flubbed it a bit. Still, I found this to be very enjoyable. ***½

Block A
AJ Styles (2) vs. Toru Yano (0)

During the excellent G1 Climax 24 a year earlier, Yano’s best match came against AJ Styles. Actually, looking at that tournament and AJ’s first match during this one and I’ve never given a G1 match of his less than three stars. That includes one against Yujiro Takahashi. He’s great at adapting to his opponent’s style and it showed here as we got a really good version of Yano’s typical fun match. There was Yano hitting AJ with a water bottle before running and screaming “BREAK” on the ropes to Styles shouting “BUT HE HIT ME” when the referee took a chair away from him, this was highly entertaining. When Styles took control, Yano went into his bag of tricks but it backfired when Styles suplexed him into the exposed turnbuckle. Styles had a great low blow counter, blocking the shot and hitting a Pele. Yano had the crowd completely fall for one of his key rollups, though it wasn’t to be. Styles rolled through and made him tap to the Calf Killer.

Winner: AJ Styles (4) in 10:13
Once again, AJ Styles adapts to his opponent’s style and makes it work so well. Despite being way higher in the card, the fans totally fall for Yano’s cheap rollups, telling you how well his character works. This was just plain fun. ***½

Block B
Hirooki Goto (2) vs. Karl Anderson (2)

This single camera stuff has been getting to me. The shows with them just don’t feel very important. Anyway, Anderson and Goto had some back and forth early on. Anderson took control with a sweet powerbomb on the apron that nearly got Goto counted out twice. Both guys provided very good counter wrestling. Anderson, being a total heel, stole some of Goto’s trademark offense to draw some heat. Goto rallied back with some of that same offense, highlighted by a sunset flip bomb off of the second rope. Just when it seemed like Goto was about to finish off the big babyface comeback run, he ate the Gun Stun and took the loss.

Winner: Karl Anderson (4) in 11:34
While these are two guys that I normally enjoy, neither has really impressed so far in the tournament. This was good, but far from great. Anderson dominated a surprising amount of the match too. It just never clicked the way I wanted it to. ***

Block A
Katsuyori Shibata (0) vs. Tetsuya Naito (2)

This ranked as #57 in my “Top 100 Matches of 2015”. It was actually the match that really made me become huge fans of both guys and, to this day, they are my two favorite performers in NJPW. Naito came out in his full suit getup, but Shibata wasn’t about to have any of his usual stalling. He attacked quickly and kicked Naito’s ass. Naito had to work the first few minutes with the suit, but he got to take it off after attacking Shibata’s leg, similar to the game plan that AJ Styles had on night one. After some leg work, he tried to go with strikes, which is a clear fight you lose against Shibata. He just hammered away on Naito. Being a cocky dick, Naito thought that slapping Shibata would be a good idea. It wasn’t. Shibata put him in the sleeper hold and finished him off with the Penalty Kick.

Winner: Katsuyori Shibata (2) in 12:11
There are better matches in the tournament (we’ve seen at least two already) but man, I really love this. It is two guys, playing to their strengths and doing what they do best. Great back and forth from both guys, some fine counters and about the right amount of time. They’d rematch it in September, though it wouldn’t be as good. ****

Block B
Shinsuke Nakamura (0) vs. Yuji Nagata (2)

These two aren’t strangers to one another, having met several times in the past, including earlier in the year for Nakamura’s Intercontinental Title. This got off to a slow start, similar to the Karl Anderson match that Nakamura had a few nights earlier. He hasn’t’ seemed very interested in the tournament so far. Both guys kicked out of each other’s finishers, which I’ve come to expect with the Boma Ye unfortunately. It’s like, the opposite of the Bad Luck Fall in terms of being a protected finish. Surprisingly, it wasn’t the Boma Ye or even his armbar that got Nakamura the win, it was a side kick to the face.

Winner: Shinsuke Nakamura (2) in 16:26 
While both of his matches have been good, Nakamura seems to kind of sleepwalking through the tournament so far. This was solid though it started slow and never really kicked into the next gear. ***

Block A
Hiroshi Tanahashi (2) vs. Hiroyoshi Tenzan (2)

Apparently, Tenzan is from Kyoto, making him the hometown favorite. As the match began, the fans immediately chanted for him. Tenzan got in a fair chunk of offense early on and had the fans in the palm of his hand. Kudos to Tanahashi, who realized that he was getting booed at times and turned up the heel antics just a bit. Not that he cheated or anything, but he got more vicious with his strikes at times and didn’t deliver a clean break at one point. He’s really good at pulling that off. Tenzan picked up several near falls that the crowd bit on but it wasn’t until he locked in the Anaconda Vice that they seemed to truly believe it was over. Nevertheless, Tanahashi won after nailing High Fly Flow.

Winner: Hiroshi Tanahashi (4) in 15:11
I feel like that was better than I remembered the first time around. When I originally watched, I wasn’t really interested in Tenzan and didn’t give this the proper attention. I did this time around and really liked it. Tanahashi subtlety going slightly heel and the pro-Tenzan crowd were really cool. ***½

Block B
Kazuchika Okada (2) vs. Tomoaki Honma (0)

After not main eventing on the first B Block show, the IWGP Champion gets to close out night four against the man with zero career G1 victories. While Okada is the champion, he couldn’t match Honma in terms of popularity here as the fans were behind the underdog from the opening bell. You could imagine this being a bit of a walk in the park for Okada and it was for a while actually. However, Honma blocked a Rainmaker with a headbutt and things got way interesting. Honma had a chance and the fans, as always, bought into everything. Okada had to dig deep to get what he thought was initially going to be easy. Of course, he nailed the Rainmaker eventually and picked up two more points, keeping Honma winless.

Winner: Kazuchika Okada (4) in 17:51
I often criticize Okada for being the kind of guy that has mediocre starts to his matches before waking up and killing it in the final act. Here, the early stuff made sense and they built to something that came off great. The crowd really added to this, bumping up the score a bit. Honma is perfect in his role as they made you believe he could win. ***¾

Overall: 7/10. While the ceiling was higher for the first set of shows, these two felt more consistent to me. There were only two matches that I ranked under three stars, so that’s eight matches that I would consider good to great. Nothing stands out as a match of the year contender, but the shows combine to give an entertaining viewing. This time around, I preferred the A Block card.

Block APointsBlock BPoints
AJ Styles4Karl Anderson4
Hirosthi Tanahashi4Kazuchika Okada4
Bad Luck Fale2Tomohiro Ishii4
Katsuyori Shibata2Hirooki Goto2
Kota Ibushi2Satoshi Kojima2
Hiroyoshi Tenzan2Shinsuke Nakamura2
Tetsuya Naito2Yuji Nagata2
Togi Makabe2Michael Elgin0
Doc Gallows0Tomoaki Honma0
Toru Yano0Yujiro Takahashi0

Thursday, July 7, 2016

NJPW G1 Climax 26 Preview: B Block


Beginning Monday, July 18th, New Japan Pro Wrestling begins their massive annual G1 Climax tournament. The tournament has existed since 1974 but it became the "G1 Climax" in 1991. It is done in round-robin format and features twenty wrestlers, split into two ten person blocks. Each wrestler takes on the other nine in their block once and the men who finish with the most points in each block meet in the finals. Two years ago, the 24th G1 Climax was the greatest wrestling tournament I've ever seen. The winner gets a shot at the IWGP Heavyweight Title at Wrestle Kingdom on January 4th, NJPW's WrestleMania. The tournament runs from 7/18 until 8/14.

EVIL

Kicking off the awesome looking B Block is a G1 Climax rookie, EVIL. I first saw him as Watanabe on ROH TV, where he was solid but didn't really stick out. Last October, he returned to NJPW as EVIL and became the first addition to Tetsuya Naito's Los Ingobernables de Japon stable. Since then, especially in 2016, EVIL has been getting better with almost each passing match. He and Hirooki Goto have been engaging in a hard hitting feud while he also had two great matches with Tomohiro Ishii this year. EVIL seems like the kind of guy that fits into the G1 style perfectly, as he's more than capable of a really great stiff match and should match up well with most of the guys in the guys in his block. I think he ends up in a similar position to his LIDJ buddy SANADA and finishes somewhere in the middle of the pack, but could be a sleeper as a top performer.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Elgin (7/22), vs. Nakajima (7/27), vs. Naito (8/7)

Katsuhiko Nakajima

This is all kinds of tremendous. With the losses of AJ Styles, Shinsuke Nakamura, Kota Ibushi and Karl Anderson, the G1 Climax looked like it had the potential to suffer. Wisely, they looked outside for help and I'm incredibly excited about the addition of Katsuhiko Nakajima. I've seen him a few times in Pro Wrestling NOAH and he almost always delivers. At just 28 years old, he's one of the youngest men in the tournament (his first G1) and should produce almost nonstop good to great matches. I'm seriously excited to see him against literally everyone in the block. Now, I don't think he's going to finish way high in the scoreboard, but I wouldn't be against the idea. He is the future of NOAH but NJPW could use a guy like him as a star. It would be much better to see than Gedo relying on yet another gaijin. Nakajima is the truth and you'll see that here.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: Literally all of them

Katsuyori Shibata

A perennial favorite for a long time now, this year seems like it could actually be the year that NJPW pulls the trigger on Katsuyori Shibata. His recent run with the NEVER Openweight Championship has been great and with it, he's earned the respect of the NEW JAPAN DADS. That ringing endorsement and door opened by the departure of top guys means this might be the best chance for Shibata. I do think that this should be his highest finish in the G1 standings since his return to NJPW. Honestly, I think the best decision would be to just have him win. The thing is, I don't see Gedo putting him to headline the Dome, so have Naito win the title shot from him at Destruction or King of Pro Wrestling, getting even more heat for Naito and showing us that those matches for the briefcase actually could see the shot changing hands. Alas, I don't think they'll do it. Shibata will win most of his matches, finish in second or third and continue to have the best matches on a nightly basis.

Prediction: 12 points
Most exciting matches: Again, literally all of them. What can I say? I like Shibata

Kenny Omega

Our third G1 rookie in this block. To start 2016, it looked like Kenny Omega was on a clear path to being the next big NJPW gaijin. He pinned Shinsuke Nakamura, turned on AJ Styles, took over as Bullet Club leader and beat Hiroshi Tanahashi for the IWGP Intercontinental Title. Unfortunately for him, his star seems to have fallen off a bit. He dropped the IC Title and lost the NEVER Openweight Six Man Tag Titles twice. He enters the G1 as a man without a title. Maybe his over the top campiness is hurting him. I think Gedo loves him though and he'll be a safe bet to finish second or third in his block. Thee are a few intriguing matches for him in the block though he's one of the guys I'm not really looking forward to. I expect some good matches, hell, maybe even a standout or two. He'll most likely be competing for the IC Title at Wrestle Kingdom 11.

Prediction: 12 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Honma (7/27), vs. Shibata (8/4), vs. Naito (8/13)

Michael Elgin

Last year, Michael Elgin was picked to work the G1 Climax and people groaned everywhere. He'd fallen out of favor with American crowds. Elgin's dream was to wrestle in Japan though, so he made the best of it. He was one of, if not the most consistent performer in the G1 Climax last year and did well enough to not only earn a contract with NJPW, but got way over with the crowd. Using that, he teamed with Hiroshi Tanahashi, won the NEVER Openweight Six Man Tag Team Titles and most recently, captured the IWGP Intercontinental Title. I love his inclusion in this block specifically as we should get some barn burners from him. The G1 style is perfect for him as his biggest issues over in the states was trying to have epic, overly long matches, but the short G1 format is perfect for him and he kills it there. It should happen again this time around and he'll be near the top of the standings as IC Champion.

Prediction: 12 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Naito (7/24), vs. Shibata (7/27), vs. Nakajima (8/13)

Tetsuya Naito

The first B Block member to actually have won this tournament in the past. Tetsuya Naito won it in 2013 in the midst of a failed mega babyface push. Last year, he reinvented himself, leads Los Ingobernables de Japon and ended up winning the IWGP Heavyweight Title earlier this year. They took the belt off of him, despite being red hot, to put it back on Kazuchika Okada again. Everyone expects Okada/Naito to headline Wrestle Kingdom 11 after being pushed to the semi-main event slot at WK8. I suggested a really good heel way to do that earlier but I find it doubtful. Naito is my pick to not only win the B Block, but to win the entire G1 Climax. I suspect he has some very good matches during the tournament since he's in such a groove right now. I predict he loses to Shibata and maybe Elgin or even a Yano, but he beats Tanahashi in a 2013 finals rematch.

Prediction: 14 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Shibata (7/30), vs. Honma (8/1), vs. Nakajima (8/4)

Tomoaki Honma

Thanks to an injury to Kota Ibushi in 2014, Tomoaki Honma got to replace him and begin what has become a fantastic G1 Climax journey. Honma went winless in the 2014 G1 before nearly doing the same last year. However, in his second to last match, he defeated Tomohiro Ishii for his first G1 win in front of a molten Korakuen Hall crowd. HONMAMANIA RAN WILD! With his initial win out of the way, I'm curious to see how he gets booked here. Does he go winless again? Does he only get one win again? Without his rival Ishii here, who does he beat? It's a tough call to be honest and he's probably the hardest guy to predict in the end. Honma has been doing better in singles action since then but not by much. Maybe he gets two wins and four points this time. I'll go with that.

Prediction: 4 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Shibata (7/22), vs. EVIL (8/4), vs. Nakajima (8/7)

Toru Yano

"The Sublime Master Thief" is at it again. Currently one half of the GHC Tag Team Champions with A Block's Naomichi Marufuji, Toru Yano has been a staple of the G1 Climax lately. He's a really good guy to have around because of his penchant for flash wins. He is the guy that tends to stop a hot streak (Takahashi in 2013, Shibata in 2015) and it doesn't really end up hurting who he beats because of how he does it. Put it this way. Yano could hit a powerbomb or something, and the crowd won't react for the pin, but if he low blows someone, they'll believe it. He plays his role so well that they know if he wins, it'll be something underhanded and that's fine. Yano tends to hove between 6 and 10 points when he's in the G1. I'm tempted to say he gets eight, but his block might be a bit too loaded for that. I'll say he finishes with six but could totally see him getting a fourth win somewhere.

Prediction: 6 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Nakajima (7/22), vs. EVIL (8/10), vs. YOSHI-HASHI (8/13)

YOSHI-HASHI

Here we have our final G1 Climax rookie. YOSHI-HASHI is a member of the Chaos stable but has always been second-tie. While Okada, Ishii, Nakamura and even Yano would get the shine, he was the heavyweight of the group that could take the pinfall losses in all of the NJPW undercard tag matches. Last year, he had a strong match with Michael Elgin during the G1 Finals but this year, he's kind of taken off. He's racked up plenty of pins in the multi-man tags and has engaged in a really fun rivalry with SANADA during the awesome Los Ingobernables de Japon vs. Chaos feud. Seeing him and his pimp cane get a chance in the G1 Climax will be pretty cool and certainly well deserved. Like EVIL, he should finish in the middle of the pack and have some very solid matches.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Nagata (7/27), vs. EVIL (7/30), vs. Naito (8/10)

Yuji Nagata

BLUE JUSTICE! The ageless wonder, Yuji Nagata, is our final G1 Climax participant. Nagata has a long list of accolades in his legendary career, including a G1 win way back in 2001. His 2016 has been really good, having some badass matches with Katsuyori Shibata and going toe to toe with him during tag matches. Nagata certainly still has a fair amount left in the tank and is almost a guarantee to have some great matches this year. Like last year though, he most likely won't find himself near the top of the standings. I believe he'll be towards the bottom half and hovering around six points, but each match he has is sure to have a hot crowd and be full of energy.

Prediction: 6 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Naito (7/22), vs. Nakajima (7/30), vs. Honma (8/13)

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Ultima Lucha Dos Part One Review

The time has finally arrived. After last year's Ultima Lucha won my "Show of the Year" Award, I'm excited for this one. The arena is set up like normal, except there are banners hyping the big matches.

4 A Unique Opportunity Semi-Final Falls Count Anywhere Match: The Mack def. Cage in 10:12
These two opened Ultima Lucha last year so Dario Cueto showed up and reminded everyone of it. To ensure that Ultima Lucha Dos is as violent as the original, he made the match Falls Count Anywhere! They started in the ring, which is different from their first match, which got **** from me. Like last year, they brawled all over the place and bring out the fun weapons. They fight into Dario's office and, perfectly in character, Dario has a wide grin as these two beat the shit out of each other. Cage got near falls after smashing a framed picture on Mack's head and again after a sick powerbomb onto chairs. Mack mimicked Honky Tonk Man after a guitar shot, in a play off of him mimicking Stone Cold last season. Mack brought some damn pinatas into play and they had weapons inside. He did get to hit the stunner after swigging some beer. Mack came off a high guardrail with a massive frog splash through a table because this match was damn insane. Cage brought out the cinder block in a callback from last season. His curb stomp failed as he slipped on beer and Mack rolled him up to avenge the loss from last season. Like last year, this was a fucking blast. It went a bit longer but they had a really fun war and played off of their first encounter perfectly. ****

4 A Unique Opportunity Semi-Final Boyle Height Bar Fight: Son of Havoc def. Texano in 7:20
The great Dario Cueto was at it again, making this a bar fight because that's what he thinks of when he sees a cowboy and a biker. There were actual drinks and such around the ring. This was a lot of fun too. Seeing Texano hit Son of Havoc with a beer, only for it to not affect him because he was wearing a helmet made me chuckle. Havoc hit a top rope rana onto a broken wooden chair. Like, there could have splinters there dude! Texano also got backdropped onto the bar, which pretty much blew up and caused him to be covered in blood. Havoc then springboard double stomped him into a piece of the bar to win. Like I said, this was fun and brutal at the same time, it just lacked something that the opener had. ***1/4

They run down the card for the next two weeks of Ultima Lucha.

- Death Match: King Cuerno vs. Mil Muertes
- Trios Championship: Jack Evans, Johnny Mundo & PJ Black (c) vs. Aerstaro, Drago & Fenix
- Ivelisse vs. Taya
- Gift of the Gods Championship: Daga vs. Killshot vs. Mariposa vs. Marty Martinez vs. Night Claw vs. Sexy Star vs. Siniestro de la Muerte
- Black Lotus vs. Dragon Azteca Jr.
- Lucha Underground Championship: Matanza Cueto (c) vs. Pentagon Jr.
- Rey Mysterio vs. Prince Puma

4 A Unique Opportunity Finals Falls Count Anywhere: Son of Havoc def. The Mack in 5:32
More from Dario Cueto, who made this one falls count anywhere as well. Dario's "RING THE BELL" was on point all night. Mack was quick to show that just because he's bigger, he wasn't over matched athletically and took to the skies. They went back and forth and fought outside, but not too much. Mack got the knees up on a Havoc shooting star press and pulled him into a pin for two. Havoc came back and hit the shooting star press to win. This was fine but the weakest part of the show so far and it came off as very anticlimactic. **3/4

After a break, Dario Cueto and Black Lotus entered the ring. She had two briefcases for Son of Havoc to choose from. One had $250,000 and the other just so happened to have a shot at the Lucha Underground Championship at Ultima Lucha Tres! Havoc said he could get an offer of $250,000,000 and still choose the title shot. The crowd popped and Dario said he'll get the shot, if he can win just one more match. Famous B appeared atop the stage to introduce his new client, 50 year old Dr. Wagner Jr!

Unique Opportunity Match: Dr. Wagner Jr. def. Son of Havoc in 2:10
This was exactly what you'd expect. Wagner attacked quickly and did his thing. Son of Havoc got in some hope spots as part of a rally but suffered too much throughout the night. He missed the shooting star press and fell to the Dr. Driver. Fine for what it was as Dario screws over the fan favorite and Dr. Wagner is $250,000 richer. NO RATING

Overall: 7/10. A solid start for Ultima Lucha. After the first match, this was on pace to be a glorious night. The bar fight was strong too and blended violence with fun very well. The final things didn't land as strong for me. Mack/Havoc left a lot to be desired and I get that Dr. Wagner Jr. is a big name, but I can't say I'm too excited to see him around. Still, Dario Cueto made this night more fun that it probably would have been otherwise. He nails everything.

If you do want to check out Lucha Underground, which you absolutely should, and don't get El Rey Network (like me), you can sign up for the streaming service Fubo.TV. It's a great way to support the company and channel while streaming the show online. You can sign up and get Lucha Underground right here with Fubo.tv!

NJPW G1 Climax 26 Preview: A Block


Beginning Monday, July 18th, New Japan Pro Wrestling begins their massive annual G1 Climax tournament. The tournament has existed since 1974 but it became the "G1 Climax" in 1991. It is done in round-robin format and features twenty wrestlers, split into two ten person blocks. Each wrestler takes on the other nine in their block once and the men who finish with the most points in each block meet in the finals. Two years ago, the 24th G1 Climax was the greatest wrestling tournament I've ever seen. The winner gets a shot at the IWGP Heavyweight Title at Wrestle Kingdom on January 4th, NJPW's WrestleMania. The tournament runs from 7/18 until 8/14.

Bad Luck Fale

For the third straight year, Bad Luck Fale enters the G1 Climax. Bullet Club member, former IWGP Intercontinental Champion and resident NJPW big man, Fale has done well so far, going 11-8 over two years. He finished third two years ago and fourth last year, while racking up two wins over Hiroshi Tanahashi. Fale is hard to predict. He gets booked very well in these tournaments, but he's been rather irrelevant for a few months as his last actual program was with Tanahashi in April. I'm not very interested in much from him as he's usually only good when taking on the very best and his block isn't exactly loaded. He'll most likely finish with a similar point total from the past two years.

Prediction: 10 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Marufuji (7/23), vs. Ishii (7/25), vs. Tanahashi (7/28)

Hirooki Goto

A year ago, it looked like New Japan was finally on the road to making Hirooki Goto a top star. Granted, he's had a lot of success in his career, including a G1 Climax victory in 2008, but he's kind of always been second tie. No IWGP Heavyweight Title wins despite two Intercontinental Title reigns and multiple New Japan Cup victories. Goto lost another shot at the big belt back in February and joined Chaos, led by the guy who beat him, Kazuchika Okada. Goto kind of feels like a big time afterthought now. He's third fiddle in Chaos, behind Okada and Ishii. Still, I suspect he does pretty well and maybe he can sort of re-establish himself as a viable contender in New Japan.

Prediction: 10 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Ishii (7/23), vs. SANADA (7/28), vs. Tanahashi (7/31)

Hiroshi Tanahashi

Two time G1 Climax winner, Hiroshi Tanahashi won the entire tournament last year, defeating Shinsuke Nakamura in the finals. Tanahashi lost his IWGP Heavyweight Title shot and Kazuchika Okada is now officially the "ace" of the company. Tanahashi said he wouldn't challenge for the title again but finds himself in the G1. He's dealt with a fair amount of injuries this year but is still a heavy favorite to make it to the finals. I can't see him winning the entire thing because the thought of another Tanahasi/Okada Tokyo Dome match sounds ridiculous. I sense he finds a way into the finals and takes a loss there, putting over someone from the B Block big time. Most likely, he works an IC Title match or something at WK next year.

Prediction: 14 points
Most exciting matches: vs. SANADA (7/18), vs. Ishii (8/3), vs. Marufuji (8/6)

Hiroyoshi Tenzan

Originally, G1 Climax legend Hiroyoshi Tenzan was left out of this year's tournament. He's a former three-time winner and has appeared in 19 straight tournaments. He was upset at being left out, so his tag partner, Satoshi Kojima, gave up his spot to him. Kojima has been a better performer than Tenzan lately, but this is cool to see. Tenzan struggled last year due to injury but can turn it on when he needs to. I'd rather he and Kojima be in than Fale for example. People are disrespecting the shit out of Tenzan's inclusion. Dude is a legend and this should be his last run through the G1 Climax. Tenzan might not win many matches, but you can expect the crowd to be completely invested in every single one of his matches.

Prediction: 6 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Ishii (7/18), vs. Okada (7/31), vs. SANADA (8/12; could be his final G1 match ever)

Kazuchika Okada

Unfortunately, Kazuchika Okada is the IWGP Heavyweight Champion again. That's my personal opinion and I know a lot of people disagree. I just don't get very excited to see Okada and don't believe he's as great as many do. With that out of the way, the guy is certainly good. He's now a four time IWGP Heavyweight Champion and isn't even thirty yet. He won the G1 in 2012 and 2014 and was a heavy favorite to pull a San Francisco Giants and win in another even year here until Dominion last month. On that night, he won back the IWGP Heavyweight Title and the champion isn't going to win the tournament. This will be similar to last year, where he entered as champion and was in contention right up until the end.

Prediction: 14 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Goto (7/25), vs. Makabe (8/3), vs. Ishii (8/6)

Naomichi Marufuji

I first saw Naomichi Marufuji in Ring of Honor, having awesome matches with Nigel McGuinness, Bryan Danielson and many others. His inclusion in this year's G1 was a fantastic surprise. I know he's no longer at his peak but Marufuji can still go when he needs to. For the past few years, the IWGP Tag Team Champions have been in the tournament. This year, the Briscoes hold them and aren't in, so we get the GHC Tag Champions instead, which Marufuji is one half of. He's in the perfect block for his style. Guys like Okada and Tanahashi play right into his strengths and he should mesh well with a lot of guys here to produce some strong matches. He appeared in the 2012 G1, scoring eight points and I think he finishes with about the same total here.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Ishii (7/28), vs. SANADA (8/3), vs. Goto (8/12)

SANADA

Our first G1 Climax rookie. SANADA spent some years over in TNA but returned at Invasion Attack this year to help Tetsuya Naito win the IWGP Heavyweight Title and join Los Ingobernables de Japon. Since then SANADA has proved himself to be a strong addition. While he lost to Kazuchika Okada at Wrestling Dontaku, he's done very well in the LIDJ vs. Chaos multi-man tags and finds himself in a bit of a rivalry with YOSHI-HASHI that has been majorly entertaining. SANADA should hover around the middle of the pack of the tournament. He'll do enough to shine but not enough to really be a big time threat. I do expect him to pick up a win over one of the top guys (Tanahashi, Okada, Ishii, etc.) giving him a nice feather in his cap.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Okada (7/23), vs. Makabe (7/28), vs. Ishii (8/8)

Tama Tonga

It's been a bit of a breakout year for Tama Tonga. He spent years in multi-man tags as part of the Bullet Club B-Team, but that has changed. To start the year, he won his fist title, the NEVER Openweight Six Man Tag Championship before capturing the IWGP Tag Team Titles with his brother, Tanga Roa. Their run with the titles was very lackluster and their matches were bland. Roa doesn't get a shot here but Tonga gets to make his G1 Climax debut. He should be involved in some interesting first time ever matches. I don't believe he'll rack up many points but he needs to use this tournament to start having breakout performances. A slew of good matches could go a long way for him.

Prediction: 6 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Tanahashi (7/25), vs. Okada (7/28), vs. SANADA (8/6)

Togi Makabe

Togi Makabe is in a bit of a strange place. He isn't as close to the end of his line as a Kojima, Nakanishi or Tenzan, but he's closer to the end than a lot of the guys in his block. Makabe has had tons of success in his career, including an IWGP Heavyweight Title reign and a G1 Climax win. Now, he's past things like that but is still booked relatively strongly. He should find himself in a similar situation to last year. A middle of the pack points total, mostly solid matches and a few bad ones (I'm looking at Fale/Togi). I have no interest in another Ishii/Makabe match (like Okada/Tana), though we're getting one. Though he doesn't enter as NEVER Openweight Champion like he did last year, he'll still end in the same place I think.

Prediction: 8 points
Most exciting matches: vs. Tanahashi (7/23), vs. Marufuji (7/31), vs. Goto (8/8)

Tomohiro Ishii

Our final G1 Climax A Block competitor is fan favorite Tomohiro Ishii. Over the past three G1 Climaxes, Ishii has put on fantastic match after fantastic match with a variety of opponents. Tomoaki Honma, Katsuyori Shibata, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Michael Elgin, the list goes on and on. Expect more of the same here. Most of his matches should be top notch because Ishii always delivers. The G1 style and format suits him. He's won the NEVER Openweight and ROH TV Titles in the past year and finished with 10 points in each of the past two G1 tournaments. I suspect he gets to ten again this time around. While his best opponents (Shibata and Honma) are on the other side, Ishii should have at least one MOTY candidate this go around.

Prediction: 10 points
Most exciting matches: I mentioned them all in other people's most exciting matches. Ishii is that damn good.