NJPW G1 CLIMAX 29 Day 1 Review (July 6th 2019, American Airlines Centre, Dallas, TX)
Roppongi 3K vs. Guerrillas Of Destiny ***1/4
Tomohiro Ishii & Shota Umino vs. Jeff Cobb & Ren Narita ***3/4
Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI vs. Jay White & Chase Owens **3/4
Jushin Thunder Liger, Juice Robinson & Toru Yano vs. Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI ***
G1 Climax 29 A Block:
Will Ospreay vs. Lance Archer ****1/2
EVIL vs. Bad Luck Fale **1/2
SANADA vs. Zack Sabre Jr. ****1/4
Kota Ibushi vs. KENTA ****+
Kazuchika Okada vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi ****3/4
Photos.
This was a very fun opening day of G1 action, emanating for the first time ever outside of Japan. Things kicked off with IWGP Heavyweight Tag champions, Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa defeating the former holders of the Junior straps, SHO and YOH in good, action packed sprint, when Tama pinned YOH at 6:42 after a Super Bomb. Jeff Cobb and Ren Narita were victorious over Ishii and Shota Umino in a great little all-action doubles clash. This was perfect for what it was, with the highlight being the tremendous exchanges between Ishii and Cobb, who face off in the B Block next Saturday, and based on their exchanges here, that match should be something else. The Young Lions looked really good too, but it was only a matter of time before one of them took the L. This time Umino drew the short straw as he looked at the light for a Cobb Tour Of The Islands at the 7:18 mark. Cobb and Ishii had a wild pull apart in the post match, which resulted in Cobb getting a bloody nose. The next two matches, whilst both good, were essentially your average New Japan spot show multi mans. Goto returned, looking in amazing shape, hitting Chase Owens with Ushigoroshi and the GTR to win in 8:38 of a decent match, but the Liger, Yano, Juice vs. LIJ match had the most crowd investment, because of its obvious greater star power. The crowd were totally behind Liger, and the LIJ trio got the heat on the legend for most of the match. Juice and Shingo got time to shine, hyping their encounter next week, and Yano stole the win for his team when he nailed BUSHI with a low blow and crdled him for the win at 8:18 of a fun outing.
Then the 29th G1 Climax kicked off in style as hometown boy Lance Archer, making his first appearance in the tournament since 2014, took on Will Ospreay, making his G1 debut. This was fantastic stuff, easily overdelivering and easily being the best match I’ve ever seen Archer in (even if it was just another day at the office for Ospreay). This went 18:17 and was a perfect ‘big guy vs. little guy’ outing, with Ospreay bouncing all over for Archer’s power moves. After hitting a massive Spanish Fly on Archer, Will tried Storm Breaker, but Lance escaped, catching him in his new EBD Claw finish. The finish saw both on the top again, this time Archer hit his Black Out off the top, and locked in the EBD Claw again for the pinfall win. EVIL and Fale couldn’t possibly follow that, and they didn’t. In fact they had the weakest match on the whole show. This was an ok brawl, but featured the usual shenanigans such as chairs and ref bumps, then Fale pinned the King Of Darkness with the Bad Luck Fall at 11:33 after hitting him with a chair.
ZSJ and SANADA had another in their series of excellent technical wrestling outings. This was an entire, 21 minute match, built entirely around counters. Every time SANADA would try something, Zack would counter into a submission or a pin attempt, but SANADA would in turn counter Zack’s counter, and so went the whole match. This was great stuff. The finish saw SANADA lock Sabre Jr in the Skull End, then go for the Moonsault, but Zack caught him in a triangle. Sanada escaped, tried another Skull End, but ZSJ turned it into a European Clutch, only for SANADA to roll through into a Japanese Leg Clutch for the win. A furious Zack locked referee Marty Asami in a leg lock in the post match. KENTA made his G1 debut next in a very stiff and believable outing with Kota Ibushi. This too was great, but at 20:51, it was a little too long for what it was, which hurt it somewhat. Had it been five minutes shorter, it would easily have been in the ****1/2 territory. This was a very realistic fight, which saw KENTA dominate, which was the story of the whole match, stiffing the hell out of Ibushi with his trademark hard kicks and strikes, and Kota would give it back as hard as he got. The plan here was to get KENTA over as a badass veteran with something to prove, thus building him as a threat in this tournament. Which is probably the right thing to do. The finish saw the pair engage in a hard strike battle, which KENTA won, then hit four hard head kicks on Ibushi, and pinned him, clean as a sheet, with the Go To Sleep.
The main event, which was the first meeting on U.S. soil between Okada and Tanahashi, two guys who have had some of the greatest matches ever in the last 7 years. It featured a suitably rabid crowd, who exploded at the bell and were 100% in to this thing from here on out. As much as this was without doubt their weakest match together since their 2013 G1 outing, the super hot crowd (and the fact I’m totally biased towards these matches) made it the best thing on this show. Tana, fresh off the shelf from elbow surgery, had his working boots on, looking healthier than he has in months (he looked bad at Dominion, worryingly bad), and hitting all his signature spots, including the HFF to the floor, which he hasn’t done since Wrestle Kingdom. The finish was packed with these guys signature counter sequences; after destroying Okada’s knees with Dragon Screws, Tanahashi tried the High Fly Flow, but Okada got the knees up. Okada tried a Tombstone, but Tana escapes, they exchange strikes, then Okada turns a backslide into the Rainmaker, keeps a hold of the wrist, and hits another. The IWGP Heavyweight Champion goes for a third, but Tanahashi counters into a small package for an incredibly believable near fall. A Tana Dragon Suplex gets another near fall, then he comes off the ropes looking for Sling Blade, but Okada catches him in the spinning Tombstone, then hits the Rainmaker at the 22:04 mark to take the two points, and win the first Okada/Tanahashi G1 that didn’t go to a time limit draw. Okada cut a promo in the post match saying he’ll be the first person to win the New Japan Cup, IWGP Heavyweight Title, and the G1 all in the same year.
NDT










