Dave Meltzer’s 2020 5+ star matches: Young Bucks, Okada, Takahashi

Image: AEW/Lee South

Even with the pandemic changing the way pro wrestling operated around the world, there were still plenty of outstanding matches in all organizations, 12 of which earned five stars or better in Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

As we do at the end of every year, we present Dave’s top-rated matches from the past 12 months with a slightly edited excerpt from the corresponding linked WON.

After starting with those which attained five stars, we now move onto the seven matches that went above five stars: five of which were in New Japan and two of which were in AEW and involved the Young Bucks. One of those was Dave’s top-rated match of the year, garnering six stars.

With the wrestling new year officially kicking off with Wrestle Kingdom 15, here’s a final look back at 2020’s top-rated matches.

IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion Hiromu Takahashi vs. Will Ospreay | Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 4, 2020 | *****1/2

Note: Originally, Dave rated this five and 1/4 stars watching it live. After watching all the WK matches back on TV, he bumped it up 1/4 star.

“The show turned around with Takahashi’s junior title win over Ospreay in the best junior heavyweight match ever in the building. You could tell from the December Korakuen Hall shows that Takahashi hasn’t missed a beat. These two have wrestled in the past before Takahashi’s injury and, of course, it was great. But, this was their best match together up to this point.

Ospreay was injured in the match landing on his feet in a crazy series of moves when doing a space flying tiger drop to the floor. He never reacted like he was hurt and continued to do two more spots landing on both feet, hitting a second space flying tiger drop over the next seconds. After the show came word he was injured and may have broken his heel. He said he didn’t feel that bad when he got up two days later and worked New Year’s Dash. But that night he was really hurting bad. He underwent X-rays and had suffered a fractured heel.

This was the third best match in Tokyo Dome history at this point, although that only lasted about an hour.”

IWGP Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Kota Ibushi  | Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 4, 2020 | *****1/2

Note: Originally, Dave rated this five and 1/4 stars watching it live. After watching all the WK matches back on TV, he bumped it up 1/4 star.

“Okada vs. Ibushi was an all-time classic.

This was Okada’s record-setting 30th career title defense, breaking Hiroshi Tanahashi’s record of 28 when he beat Sanada in October. I’ve seen everyone on big stages who has been considered the all-time best of the last 50 years, whether that be Jack Brisco, Terry Funk, Ric Flair, Mitsuharu Misawa, Bret Hart, Shawn Michaels, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kenny Omega, Ibushi, Ospreay, Jumbo Tsuruta, Genichiro Tenryu, Randy Savage, Ricky Steamboat or anyone else you want to throw in that mix. Okada right now is a step above every single one of them. There are those better at mentally putting a match together. There are those at his level as athletes. There are those who execute as good. There are those with more natural charisma. But Okada is unique in that a few years ago, he was a super wrestler who was clearly behind Shinsuke Nakamura and Tanahashi when it came to charisma. He comes out now with that aura that you are seeing a guy like the Jordan of his sport which was really something only Kobashi had and Flair had and Tanahashi was maybe slightly shy of.”

AEW Tag Team Champions Hangman Page & Kenny Omega vs. Young Bucks | Revolution
February 29, 2020 |  ******

“After the match was over, the immediate reaction was that it was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, tag team match of all-time. Jim Ross called it the greatest tag match he could remember broadcasting and Tony Schiavone said it was the greatest tag team match he’d ever seen. Then again, given they are AEW announcers, you have to temper that. Still, my reaction when it was over that it was the best tag team match ever in the U.S., and the only stuff that may have been comparable was early 90s All Japan stuff in the Mitsuharu Misawa, Kenta Kobashi, Toshiaki Kawada and Akira Taue days, and the All Japan women stuff in the Manami Toyota & Toshiyo Yamada days.

So this past week, I watched in a row: Misawa & Kobashi vs. Kawada & Taue, Midnight Express vs,. Fantastics (which I always considered the beat American tag team match I ever saw, a match from Chattanooga where the Fantastics won the U.S. tag team titles) and Bucks vs. Omega & Page for the third time in four days. Pardon the pun, but those were three fantastic matches and completely different — different times, different places and different audiences. The key is that with the first two matches, if you transported them to 2020, decades after they both took place, and could bring the audience with them, they are still ***** matches.

…As for Saturday’s match, watching it after the other two, it was clearly the best match of the three for a 2020 crowd. While both of those matches would still be among the best, Midnight-Fantastics would be the fourth best match I’ve seen this year (better than Sabre-Ospreay in London but well below Okada-Ibushi and Ospreay-Hiromu Takahashi). The All Japan tag match would be about the same while Saturday’s would be first or second.

It had the best storytelling, but it was not that far ahead of Midnight vs. Fantastics in that realm, but did beat the All Japan match handily. It was the most spectacular of the three, easily. It did not have the sports feel of the Japan match, but it had a very different and more respectful and smarter audience than the NWA match. In many ways, it was the most healthy atmosphere because while the guys were going too far with the risks, without a doubt, the audiences appreciated them for what they were doing. There was no con involved, no attempt to pull the wool over the eyes of the audience or pretend, which you can’t do in a modern world. There was no guy along for the ride like Taue or Stan Lane (who both brought something to their matches but were clearly the least talented of the four).

Part of that is that the person who would be thought to be ahead of time as the guy on that spot in this week’s tag match, Page, was the key player in the key story. The story of the match is that, in the end, Page was to outshine the other three by design and win strongly at the end. But this match not only had more stories and more layers, but also far more depth to the storytelling. All were close to perfect for their audiences. All would transport into different eras and be among the best matches of the year. Nobody had an edge in pacing and none of the three bouts, all over 30 minutes, had a second of down time or ever dragged or felt too long. All actually left much shorter than they really were.

In the end, this week’s match was the best, but saying any of the three weren’t among the best tag matches of all-time seems ludicrous to me now.”

Kota Ibushi vs. Minoru Suzuki | New Japan G1 Climax
October 10, 2020 | *****1/4

“This may have been the best match of Suzuki’s career and he’s had match of the year wins with Tanahashi and A.J. Styles. This was just insane. It was more like a one-take movie fight scene with the hero of the movie facing the monster that won’t die. 

…Ibushi did the Urijah Faber-style jumping knee but Suzuki got the choke again. He went for the Gotch piledriver, but Ibushi used a jumping knee which Suzuki caught. They traded sick headbutts and there was a double headbutt. Ibushi finally connected on a jumping knee and hit the kamagoye for the pin. The scene was spectacular because the idea was the only way to stop Suzuki in a fight was to knock him out cold. So, Suzuki laid on his back like he was knocked out cold and got a big smile on his face.”

Kazuchika Okada vs. Shingo Takagi | New Japan G1 Climax
October 10, 2020 | *****1/4

“Okada vs. Takagi was not the best match of either man’s career, but would have won match of the year in the vast majority of years. This was totally different from the Ibushi-Suzuki match but every bit of the same level of a classic that would have won match of the year more years than not over the past 30. 

Okada hit a spinning tombstone, put on the money clip and hit the rainmaker but Takagi came back with a pumping bomber. Takagi used a headbutt, punches and then a rainmaker for a near fall. Takagi hit last of the dragon for a near fall and a pumping bomber. This was again where time calls are effective especially when everyone knows that every win or loss makes a difference because this race is going down to the wire. At this point, most figured a 30:00 draw after this classic of a match. Okada hit another rainmaker and put on the money clip. In desperation, Takagi got up, doing this incredible sell job on the money clip, grabbed the referee (Red Shoes Unno) and pulled him down. Okada used a neck snapper and put on the money clip again. Takagi did an unreal struggle. Unno was screaming at him about giving up and then Takagi passed out without tapping, so Unno stopped the match.”

AEW Tag Team Champions FTR vs. Young Bucks | Full Gear
November 7, 2020 | *****1/4

“Ever since The Revival broke out as the best working heel tag team in pro wrestling in NXT with matches against Johnny Gargano & Tommaso Ciampa and Chad Gable & Jason Jordan, there had been an underlying social media feud with The Young Bucks.

It was the perfect battle of philosophies: old school vs. new school style, The Revival’s tagline of “no flips, just fists” was in response to the Young Bucks perception of doing flips, which at one point led to a spot doing a bunch of flips to do a back rake to play into the criticism. From that point, both teams wanted to do the match. During the ROH years, the Young Bucks & Cody would say “F*** the Revival” as a chant at the end of shows. The Bucks would sometimes wear FTR on their outfits.

The Revival turned down ridiculous money from WWE (at a time WWE didn’t want to lose anyone) to come to AEW, choosing fun and personal fulfillment. They knew there was a low ceiling for them in WWE as tag teams are slotted in a certain way and they had the handle of very good workers but not particularly charismatic: the kiss of death in WWE. Sometimes, they’d be featured at a certain level and other times they’d be ignored.

In leaving WWE, they played on the feud, changing their ring names to FTR. They spent months building for their first match on this PPV. It started with them as clear rivals but not enemies. They both vyed for a tag title shot at Adam Page & Kenny Omega, but Page cost the Bucks the match with the idea that FTR had manipulated him. FTR then won the gauntlet and beat Page & Omega to win the titles. Then, the Bucks behaved heelish with the idea they weren’t turning heel but needed to get into the dark space for the match. Then they added the stip to where if the Bucks didn’t win, they would never challenge for the titles again. This was the same stip that Cody used one year ago for his match with Chris Jericho which he lost, and at least thus far, has never reneged on. To try and create the drama, FTR won every match since their arrival.

The Bucks won the titles in a match where you could see that both teams wanted to make a statement with and have an all-time classic. It was a clear-cut match of the night on a show filled with great action. Many remarked it was one of the best tag team matches ever held in the U.S., and some even ranked it above the Bucks vs. Page & Omega earlier this year (which I would still say is the best U.S. tag match I’ve ever seen).”

Figure Four Online Best of 2020, pt. 3: Undertaker’s Cameo for Granny

The Figure Four Online best of 2020 audio compilation shows have arrived.

Hear some of the best clips from the past year’s Wrestling Observer Radio, Wrestling Observer Live, Bryan & Vinny, Filthy Four Daily and more. (Thanks to subscriber PL Perez for his great work!)

In this final installment, hear these top 13 moments of the year:

13. Elvis vs. The Beatles (Dave Gets Double Detention)
12. Karl’s Warrior Impersonation/Wankfest/Pilloried
11. The Egg Beaters
10. Undertaker’s Cameo/Granny’s Will/Upside-Down Dropkicks and Butt Bangs
9. Bahamian Workers and the Gimmicked Bowling Lane/Bryan’s Hair
8. General Tau’s Chicken
7. A Murderer’s Row of Callers
6. Joel Osteen at the Super Bowl
5. Arctic Snowballs
4. How Do Old People Watch This Show?
3. The Dumbest Things Bryan Ever Did In Wrestling
2. The Final Monday Night Wars Review
1. Jim Valley 5, Death 0

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Dave Meltzer’s 2020 5-star matches: Okada, WALTER, Naito, Shiozaki

Even with the pandemic changing the way pro wrestling operated around the world, there were still plenty of outstanding matches in all organizations, 12 of which earned five stars or better in Dave Meltzer’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

As we do at the end of every year, we present Dave’s top-rated matches from the past 12 months with a slightly edited excerpt from the corresponding linked WON. We’ll start with the five star matches first and look at the seven matches that earned more than five stars in a separate post.

IWGP Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Intercontinental Champion Tetsuya Naito | New Japan Wrestle Kingdom 14
January 5, 2020

Note: Originally, Dave rated this four and 3/4 stars watching in person (remember those times?) but after watching it on TV, he bumped it up to five.

“(Fans) got up for the key spots (the Liger retirement, the Minoru Suzuki run in on Jon Moxley, Jericho vs. Tanahashi) and where Naito beat Okada to conclude a multi-year storyline that started six years earlier when fans voted he and Okada out of the Tokyo Dome main event, and that continued in 2018 when most expected Naito to win the title only to have it not happen. The fatigue was not enough to hamper the great moments, but did hurt some of the undercard bouts.

It is true that Naito peaked as a cool character and merchandise seller in 2018. If the world was only about Naito, he should have won the title that night. Most second-guessed Gedo’s decision, but in hindsight, for the company, Okada on top in 2018 was far superior to Naito because of the Tanahashi and Omega storylines and the chasing of records. 2019 had to be revamped due to Omega leaving, but there was no way they could have gone to Naito that year where it would have ended up as big as it was here.

But after doing all that and with the emotions the highest, Gedo took away the celebration by having KENTA attack Naito. He did give Naito time to recover and cut the closing promo, so everyone went home getting to see the experience — a big moment that culminated a six-year-long quest.”

Best Friends vs. Ortiz & Santana parking lot fight | AEW Dynamite
September 16, 2020

“The company had one of the craziest and best matches in its history with the parking lot match. I’d go ***** as it was among the best matches of its kind I have ever seen and while totally different, the only thing I can compare it to was the Ted DiBiase vs. Jim Duggan tuxedo street fight coal miner’s glove match in Houston in the 80s. Jim Ross said it was the best street fight match he had ever called. It’s not my personal favorite kind of match because all four guys killed themselves taking bumps on car hoods, roofs, windshields and other crazy spots with all kinds of hardway blood all over people’s bodies. It highlighted what was one of the best Dynamite shows to date.

The backstory: when the pandemic hit in March, Tony Khan had two immediate ideas. One was putting the wrestlers in the crowd with faces on one side and heels on the other, taken from watching Jimmy Kimmel using the staff as his audience. The other was a parking lot match which came out of a long weekend of brainstorming while working on the 3/18 show. The match was set up for Best Friends vs. Penta & Rey Fenix and advertised for the 3/25 show. But things happened with the tapings and it was simply impossible to do the advertised match and show.

The match was put together by Jerry Lynn and the four guys with Khan also having some influence. It was a one take match, not edited. The Orange Cassidy coming out of the trunk finish was the scheduled finish for the original match in March. The idea changed when Santana pitched Khan on doing a program with Best Friends with the idea of destroying Sue’s (Trent’s mother) minivan to start the feud. When Khan agreed, the destroying of the minivan idea led to Khan thinking that ,if possible, the angle blowoff should be the parking lot match where they finally did the Cassidy finish. So, at that point, they laid out a three match program with this as the final match.”

Shingo Takagi vs. Will Ospreay | New Japan G1 Climax
September 27, 2020

“This was only the second time these two have ever wrestled and the first was the 2019 match of the year winner. They did an insane opening spot, channeling Low Ki and Samoa Joe from early ROH. Takagi hit a death valley bomb on the floor followed by a Billy Graham throat drop and a DDT. They traded wicked chops like explosions. Ospreay used hard kicks until Takagi used a dragon screw. Takagi tried a brainbuster, but Ospreay flipped in mid-air and somehow ended up doing a stunner, followed by a phenomenal forearm and a space flying Tiger drop….

…Ospreay went for the hidden blade but Takagi ducked. Ospreay then used a rolling elbow. Takagi did the Hansen/Kobashi clotheslining the guy off the top rope spot and a death valley bomb off the middle rope, but was slow in going for the pin. Ospreay kicked out at one. Takagi then got the win after a pumping bomber and Last of the Dragon. This was among the top five matches of this year.”

NXT UK Champion WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov | NXT UK
October 29, 2020

“Probably the most brutal match in WWE history took place on the NXT UK weekly TV show with WALTER retaining over his longtime rival in 25:09. It’s a ***** match, but one I almost hesitate to give it to because of the brutality level. If you compare it to one of the great Minoru Suzuki matches, the offense wasn’t nearly as crisp as far as looking like a trained fighter. WALTER, who is close to 300 pounds, just chopped the hell out of Dragunov who is a master seller. Dragunov also has one of those pale bodies where the damage shows up, so he was all beet red throughout the chest and upper back mostly from hard chops. WALTER’s chest was beat up as well.

Dragunov was whipped into the ropes and went throat first into the middle rope and whiplashed himself on purpose. Dragunov did a missile dropkick three quarters of the way across the ring. WALTER gave him a choke suplex on the floor. Dragunov is like Ishii in the sense his selling is legit in a different manner than most pro wrestlers. WALTER gave Dragunov a power bomb on the apron, a second in the ring, and a splash off the top rope but Dragunov kicked out. WALTER finally beat him with a choke. By this point, Dragunov was bleeding heavily from the mouth. It was gruesome. To pull this off at this level with no fans was unbelievable. I thought WALTER vs. Tyler Bate last year was better due to the superior storytelling, but this was still an incredible performance by both.”

GHC Champion Go Shiozaki vs. Takashi Sugiura | Pro Wrestling NOAH 
December 6, 2020

Shiozaki’s title retention over Sugiura was one of the best matches of the year. There are natural comparisons between this and Shiozaki’s win over Katsuhiko Nakajima which a lot of people talked about for match of the year. Both matches were exceptionally hard hitting. This match was even longer, had more variety, and peaked better. I think the pacing for this match was perfect and it went 51:44, and obviously felt long, but not that long because of the slow pace and the great selling of every move.

To go that long given the restrictions on cheering is a risk. I’m sure some would feel it went too long, but I never got that feeling because it was always intense and never felt slow or rushed. I don’t know about match of the year, but I would say it’s a match that if you are voting for match of the year, you should go out of your way to watch.”

Figure Four Online Best of 2020, pt. 2: MJF, Bryan vs. spider, the Piper bounty

The Figure Four Online best of 2020 audio compilation shows have arrived.

Hear some of the best clips from the past year’s Wrestling Observer Radio, Wrestling Observer Live, Bryan & Vinny, Filthy Four Daily and more.

In this second installment, hear #34-14:

34. MJF Takes Over the Jericho Cruise Q&A
33. Instead Of Killing Him, They Gave Him Some Sort Of Honor
32. Tom Drives Bryan Insane With a Hogan Recap and the NWO Theme
31. Semp Ethers Scurll
30. Vinny, Granny, and Tom Turn Into Robots
29. Bryan Versus the Spider
28. How Can People Jump Off the Cage Onto These Metal Tables and Not End Up Dead?
27. The Beach at the Ocean vs. the Beach at the Lake/Calvin Tankman/Spiders and Abrupt Goodbyes
26. Remembering Crazy Wayne/Al Snow’s Website
25. Granny’s Garbage / I’m Not 91!
24. What’s A Fucking Ring Made Out of Brass Anyway?
23. Kentucky, the Man Behind the State
22. Fat People Can’t Eat Fruit
21. My 10-Year-Old Daughter Knows More About Coronavirus Than the Governors of Florida and Georgia
20. Tommy Rich’s Dog
19. Dave, What Are You, F*ckin’ 80 Years Old and F*ckin’ Still Lookin’ Jacked Over Here?
18. The Halloween Song Contest
17. Roddy Piper, John Nord, and a Bounty on Bryan
16. Dogs vs Housekeepers/Spaghetti Is Hard
15. Bryan Accepts His Award For Best Wrestling Book
14. Is Seth Rollins Doing His Job Well?

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Figure Four Online Best of 2020, pt. 1: Jim Valley, Dave’s stopwatch, more

The Figure Four Online best of 2020 audio compilation shows have arrived.

Hear some of the best clips from the past year’s Wrestling Observer Radio, Wrestling Observer Live, Bryan & Vinny, Filthy Four Daily and more.

In this first installment, hear #35-50:

50. Jim Valley 4, Death 0
49. Jerry Seinfeld and Jerry Sunka/Granny Tells Jokes/So Whatever/Rod Van Dam
48. Tom Recites Braun Strowman Promos
47. Vince Fires You and Nobody Else, and the Earth Isn’t Flat
46. Brent Hangs Up on Bryan
45. Can You Book an Uber to the North Pole?
44. Gifts Cards / I’ll Call Her Shyra / Omeyga vs. San Diego
43. Killer Khan Sings Karaoke
42. Dave’s Stopwatch
41. Don Callis, You Can F*ck Right Off!
40. Cornerman Says the Dumbest Sh*t/Just Throw the Towel In, Already
39. Undertaker’s Gravy-est Matches
38. Karaoke With Tom
37. The Greatest Match Of All Time
36. Lance Storm’s Answering Machine
35. Rob Forgets to Hit Record

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