LiA Bespoke Project: Tournament Arcs Overtime – Best Battles

As a companion piece to the main tournament arcs article, Nicc asked me to include some of my favorite battles from anime – whether the arc itself made the main list or not. Here are just a few that come to mind for me.

  • Gon vs. Hisoka: Hunter X Hunter – Obviously, this has to be mentioned even with the “Heaven’s Arena” arc itself making the list. Between the ridiculously Godly sakuga and the crazy tension between the combatants, this was… nuts.
  • Harada-sensei vs. Suou-meijin: Chihayafuru – This wasn’t the Chihayafuru tournament arc I singled out (there are seemingly hundreds to choose from) but this is my single favorite match in the series. It has to come as a pair, though, with Harada’s semifinal match with Arata, where Chihaya betrayed him and he won anyway.
  • Sai vs. Touya-meijin: Hikaru no Go – Simply put, one of the most remarkable competition sequences in animanga. The disembodied spirit of a Heian Go master and an ill middle-aged man sitting in front of old-school PCs, playing a board game in virtual form. How can that possibly be as riveting as this is? But oh, how it is. I can’t even describe the tension, especially in anime form – it’s off the charts.
  • Mifune Dolphins vs. Yokohama Little: Major – The dramatic conclusion (though not the literal one) to the Little League arc in Major. A great underdog story, with Goro taking his entire team on his back and giving everything he has in that tiny body until he has no more to give. In sports terms, it doesn’t get any more heroic than Honda (that was still his name) Goro here.
  • Junpei vs. Luou, “Swan Lake”: Dance Dance Danseur – OK, not a tournament but still, what a battle. All the more remarkable for it to be so riveting in the midst of one of the biggest plot disasters in recent anime.
  • Eiichirou vs. Ide: Baby Steps – There are lots of great tournament arcs in Baby Steps, which is not surprising for the best tennis series in animanga history. But truthfully the series is more about Ei-chan’s battles with himself than with opponents – that’s what makes it arguably the best sports manga ever. If I had to pick one match, though, it would be Maruo going up against Ide Yoshiaki. It’s fascinating because Ide, in addition to being tough as nails, is a wildly popular and charismatic opponent, which forces Maruo to compete against the crowd as well as his opponent (and his own doubts).
  • Sakamichi Onoda vs. Manami Sangaku: Yowamushi Pedal – I’m giving the nod to the entire competitive relationship here rather than one specific inter-high. Onoda and Manami is one of the great “fated rival” relationships in sports anime, built on overlapping skill sets and mutual respect.
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5 comments

  1. A

    Sai vs Toya meijin is still in my definitive favorite anime moments. Even beyond the match itself, it was the build up to it and led from it. The series spent a ton of time from early on building these two up. The machinations of even getting the match to happen. The match itself paying off dramatically. And then the ending with sai and hikaru. It really is one of my all time favorite anime moments.

  2. It is indeed one of mine as well. Truly epic in a totally non-traditional way.

  3. I finally finished both seasons of Baby Steps (and then went on to read the rest of the manga). I think you’re probably right that it has to be the Ide match–the Nabae match is technically the climax of the entire anime, but tournament victory is not what the show has in store for Maruo-kun.

  4. One reason I lean towards the Ide match as the quintessential Baby Steps battle is that it’s so driven by the psychology of the moment. And ultimately, I think it’s the exploration of the psyche of the athlete that makes the series what it is.

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