7. Mina Shirakawa & Unagi Sayaka vs. Haruka Umesaki & Rin Kadokura
8. Chihiro Hashimoto & Yuu vs. Maika Ozaki & MIRAI
Team 200kg dictated the pace for much of the match and it felt like a showcase of the team. The ground exchanges between MIRAI and Hashimoto were an exciting clash of judo and wrestling, and the first meeting between MIRAI and Yuu, who are often compared, was interesting. Maika Ozaki didn't stand out much, but she deserves credit for taking all of the big moves and getting crushed repeatedly by Hashimoto & Yuu. ***1/2
9. Maya Yukihi, Mayumi Ozaki & Starlight Kid vs. Nagisa Nozaki, SAKI & Takumi Iroha
The first half was the standard Ozaki-gun garbage fest, and the second half was mostly solid wrestling with some cool stereo moves, nothing in particular stood out. The only thing I found interesting about the match going in was the visual of Starlight Kid teaming up with Ozaki-gun and the freshness of Kid facing three opponents she had never fought before. Without Starlight Kid, this mishmash of indie veteran and aging wrestlers probably wouldn't fill up Shinjuku FACE, let alone Korakuen Hall. As a vehicle to further the ascension of Starlight Kid, I think the match was successful. As a match on its own, I don't think it was anything special. Baffling selection of participants for the main event of an event celebrating 60 years of women's wrestling at Korakuen Hall. Optimal match result though. In a previous era, someone who had recently become a new adult would almost certainly be on the losing end of an elder. It is refreshing to see the match was not affected by that kind of shortsighted, regressive thinking that was one of the reasons the industry collapsed in the first place. **
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