Dave Meltzer Gives Match Incredible 6 Star Rating

Dave Meltzer Gives Match Incredible 6 Star Rating

For many years, the highest match rating you could expect to see from the Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer was five stars, but that all changed in 2017 when he awarded Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada a monster six star rating.

He has since awarded several matches more than five stars, but very few matches have reached the level of Okada vs. Omega.

However, we can now add one more match to that very small and illustrious club, as Will Ospreay vs. Shingo Takagi from Wrestling Dontaku Night Two has just been given six stars.

Here is Meltzer’s report of the match.

It started slower than you’d expect which I guess was a sign they were going long. Takagi clotheslined Ospreay over the top. Ospreay whipped Takagi into the barricade. Takagi used a drop toe hold leading to Ospreay catching his throat on the barricade and then dropped Ospreay face first on the apron. Ospreay backdropped Takagi on the apron. Ospreay then walked to the timekeepers table and kissed the IWGP belt. Takagi set up two tables together. Ospreay suplexed Takagi back in the ring and hit the phenomenal forearm for a near fall. Ospreay started working on Takagi’s left arm. He wrapped the arm around the post. Ospreay delivered hard kicks to the left shoulder and used a reverse Bloody Sunday for a near fall. Ospreay then worked on the arm with a Kimura.

Takagi came back with noshigame and a wheelbarrow German suplex, Ospreay landed on his feet, Takagi tried a pumping bomber and Ospreay flipped over and landed on his feet and went for a power bomb but Takagi hit a sliding lariat. That was amazing. Ospreay used the cheeky nandos kick, then jumped to the top rope and hit the Spanish fly for a near fall. Ospreay draped Takagi on the top rope and hit a shooting star press on him twice for a near fall. Takagi used Made in Japan through two tables. Ospreay was bleeding from the back. They teased Ospreay losing the title via count out but he barely got in at 19. Takagi used Made in Japan right on his head for a near fall. Takagi set up a pumping bomber but Ospreay collapsed. He whipped Ospreay to the ropes but Ospreay collapsed again. Takagi climbed to the middle rope with Ospreay on his back, but Ospreay escaped and went for a top rope huracanrana. Takagi held on and then came off the top rope into an Oscutter. Ospreay went for the hidden blade but Takagi ducked.

Ospreay landed a high kick and did an Oscutter off the top rope but Takagi blocked and hit a GTR, a left arm lariat, went for a pumping bomber, Ospreay landed on his feet and Takagi hit an Oscutter and then finally hit the pumping bomber. Ospreay got a near fall with a crucifix, then used a spinning forearm, a hook kick and set up stormbreaker but Takagi turned it into last of the dragon. Ospreay used a poison rana and Takagi came back with a poison rana of his own. Ospreay hit the hidden blade and went for the pin but Takagi’s arm was under the plane of the ropes. Ospreay couldn’t get him up for stormbreaker and Takagi came back with all kinds of elbows, a pop up Death Valley bomb. Takagi went for another pumping bomber but Ospreay turned it into a Spanish fly. Takagi went for another clothesline but Ospreay landed a knee. Ospreay landed elbow after elbow and Takagi came back with elbows. They traded head-butts. Ospreay hit the rainmaker, hidden blade and stormbreaker for the pin.

It is just the eighth match in pro-wrestling history to receive six stars, so it’s fair to say it’s probably one worth checking out when you have time.

What are your thoughts on the above story? Let us know in the comments on Twitter or Facebook.

3 years ago by Andy Datson

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