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[2001-09-01-NOAH-Departure] Daisuke Ikeda vs Tamon Honda


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  • 2 weeks later...

These are two of my favorite Puro workers ever, and this one of my favorite Puro matches. Honda missed his calling as a BattlArts guys, and all I want for my birthday is to see all of his FUTEN matches. This is the semi final match of a mini tourney for a GHC title shot and felt like a big deal. Honda is an Olympic wrestler and he has some really amazing takedowns, just tremendous speed and force. Meanwhile Ikeda is throwing nasty kicks and clotheslines. It was basically striker versus grappler as Ikeda had the advantage on the feet while Honda took control on the mat. Finish was great with Honda doing as nasty leg grabbed takedown and quickly shifted into multiple variations of Olympic Hells until he grabbed one that finished him.

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  • 2 months later...

I never got to see much Honda after he stopped headbutting people over and over. This is something I have to remedy. Honestly this match wouldn't have been out of place in Battlarts at all. Honda getting the better of it early until Ikeda finally scores a small victory on the ground. Ikeda's pride is put to rest now and he goes to his bread & butter, kicking Honda over and over. The only part I don't care for are the lariat nosells. Dammit I hate those.

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  • 1 month later...

This match is everything I could have wanted from two of my favorite wrestlers of the 2000s. I love the NOAH midcard during this era and this is probably the best singles match the midcard ever created. Honda's mat wrestling is so spectacular. He is ridiculously strong and you can see it in every takedown. In order to build Honda's mat skills as a threat to Akiyama they really pushed the matwork during this tournament. I doubt anyone else in NOAH would have looked as comfortable on the mat with Honda as Ikeda. Probably a top 5 NOAH match.

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  • 1 month later...

I knew as soon as finished this match I would be in the minority regarding this one. The match was built around selling, which I love, but they were still trading moves with little rhyme or reason towards the end and there a lack of struggle after the early part of the match. I honestly thought Honda was overselling. Besides the cross armbreaker, Ikeda really did not get much in the way of offense and yet Honda was selling like it was an even match. It disguised the match as competitive when Honda was actually crushing him. I thought it was quite good and very different than the usual main event NOAH fare, but nothing as special as others have mentioned.

 

Tamon Honda vs Daisuke Ikeda - NOAH 09/01/01

 

NOAH was running in a small building with stained glass, a very interesting setting for a very interesting match. There was nothing about this bout that said NOAH. It would have felt more at home in New Japan or even in BattlArts. This is not surprising as Ikeda cut his teeth at Fujiwara's Gym and the original BattlArts. Ikeda likes to kick people hard. Honda is an Olympic wrestler and looks to neutralize Ikeda with takedowns. Honda does not have his facial hair so he does not look like the world's ugliest pro wrestler. It feels like early UFC where the wrestler takes down a striker, but does not how to finish him off down there and just smothers him. Ikeda proves why Honda has taken this strategy with flurries of kicks, but finally evens the match with a cross armbreaker. If you respect the cross armbreaker, I respect you. Honda definitely respected the cross armbreaker with his selling. This match is totally built around selling, which is a great contrast the big bomb nature of most NOAH matches. However, there was still a distinct lack of struggle and not much in the way of a story once the wrestler vs. grappler story ended. Good example was Honda powerbomb -> Ikeda triangle -> Honda leg lace with not signs of struggle. I loved Ikeda using the ropes to counterweight a Honda throw, but soon they just throwing each other around. It makes sense for Honda to go for throws, but I would have liked to seen Ikeda use his striking ability to counteract Honda. Honda is eventually able to pick up a submission victory over Ikeda. I see why a lot people like this match. It is minimalist match centered around selling. Personally, I thought Honda was overselling. I understood selling the arm, but he was selling general fatigue and pain like Ikeda was having a competitive match with him. Ikeda did not get much in the way of offense. Even before Ikeda's back drop driver, Honda was selling like he had been through a war and all Ikeda had done was a cross armbreaker. Honda's selling effectively disguised this as more competitive as it was. I enjoyed it as something very different than the NOAH's main event scene. They could have used this diversity more as the decade progressed. ***1/2

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  • GSR changed the title to [2001-09-01-NOAH-Departure] Daisuke Ikeda vs Tamon Honda
  • 1 year later...
  • 4 months later...

So this is Tamon Honda, hmm? Not exactly what I was expecting. This was more amateur style matwork than shoot style, and Ikeda was treated like a junior going up against a heavy, which I guess was always going to happen once he left BattlARTS. There were some cool moves, but it didn't really strike me as a good Ikeda match. I will keep giving Honda a try, though. 

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  • 3 weeks later...

Honda's matwork is always a treat, and paired with Ikeda's more rough-and-tumble bati-bati style, it makes for an interesting match-up. I thought the stuff on the ground was the easy highlight, especially some of Honda's transitions. That legwhip to set up the finish was nuts. Of course, Ikeda is going to strike when he's got the opportunity but Honda made him work for it. Probably not as high on it as others but still a very solid match. 

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  • 1 year later...

Badass match initially based around Honda's superior ground work before they start trying to finish each other off with suplexes and lariats. Ikeda's first real chance comes minutes after Honda keeping him in check. Ikeda starts blasting Honda with kicks and forearm blows (that first kick looked stiff as hell, too), which at least wore Honda down, but Honda just keeps going low and bringing him lateral to give himself a breather. Honda had some strikes of his own but he was against the Potato King himself so he had to be smart in tying up Ikeda's limbs instead. Ikeda, finding any opening he could, delivered a GREAT counter where he was holding onto the ropes to prevent a German, but then instead improvises by pushing on the rope with his boot, going down with Honda and from what I could tell landing on Honda's HEAD. Awesome end stretch filled with almost each move, no matter how basic, being a potential ender. This is the kind of match that makes you respect every suplex or takedown. Great finish, too, thanks to Honda actually kind of slipping up on that STF and having to change gears.

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  • 1 year later...

Some interesting ideas here, but I fall in the "really good but not great" camp due to the match feeling one-sided and generally lacking drama. I'm in agreement on the opening matwork being the best part of the match. If you pay attention, you can see that most of Honda's stuff is based on Greco-Roman wrestling while Ikeda's is more traditional shoot-style groundwork. The story as the match unfolded seemed to be about Ikeda pretty much getting shut down at whatever he tried against Honda. Tries to dig into his Fujiwara training and take the fight to the ground -> Gets dominated by an Olympic level wrestler. Tries to go for flash submissions like won him against Rikio -> Gets reversed into a kneebar. Tries to go for Honda's bad knees with leg kicks and pin him with backdrops -> Honda comes right back and reverses the backdrop. I wouldn't say that the match lacked struggle overall as Ikeda had to work every time he got something in, but Honda's comebacks were all super easy and created the impression of this being a higher ranked guy vs. an overperforming jobber, which is disappointing know how good Ikeda could be.

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