Eddie Kingston’s opponent for NJPW Strong Nemesis has been revealed.
Kingston will take on Gabriel Kidd. Kidd returned to to the ring at NJPW Strong’s Riverside, California tapings on November 15 after more than six months out of action.
The prior month at New Japan Showdown tapings in Philadelphia, Kidd delivered an interview where he openly discussed struggling with his mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic while isolating in NJPW’s dojo.
11 matches are now official for Nemesis, which will take place at the Vermont Hollywood venue in Los Angeles, California. Tickets for the show are still available. Here is the announced card:
NJPW Strong Nemesis, Thursday, December 9, 7 p.m. Pacific time —
Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels
David Finlay vs. Jonah
Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari
Brody King vs. Dave Dutra
Karl Fredericks & Kevin Knight vs. Bateman & Misterioso
TJP vs. The DKC
Eddie Kingston vs. Gabriel Kidd
Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos
Royce Isaacs vs. Lucas Riley
Juice Robinson vs. Bad Dude Tito
Clark Connors & Jordan Clearwater vs. Chris Bey & Hikuleo
NJPW Strong’s first taping of 2022 will take place in Seattle, Washington at Washington Hall on Saturday, January 15, 2022. The event will be branded The New Beginning USA. The company made the announcement today.
While no matches have been announced for the event, Jay White, Tom Lawlor, JONAH, El Phantasmo, Fred Rosser and Gabriel Kidd have been announced as appearing at the show.
Tickets go on sale Monday, November 29 at 10 a.m. Pacific time. Prices will range from $30 for standing room to $150 for VIP stage seating.
Seattle in January will follow Los Angeles, California in December, Riverside, California and San Jose, California in November, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in October, Garland, Texas in September and Long Beach, California in August on NJPW’s tour of the United States.
The 2021 New Beginning USA show featured Jon Moxley defending the IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship against KENTA, taped in an empty arena due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Four matches have been added to the December 9 NJPW Strong taping in Los Angeles.
Alex Coughlin’s challenge series will continue against JR Kratos.
Lucas Riley will make his NJPW Strong debut against Royce Isaacs.
Juice Robinson will take on the debuting Bad Dude Tito.
In tag team action, Bullet Club’s Chris Bey and Hikuleo will face Clark Connors and Jordan Clearwater.
Nemesis will take place at the Vermont Hollywood venue in Los Angeles, California. Tickets for the show are still available. Here is the announced card:
NJPW Strong Nemesis, Thursday, December 9, 7 p.m. Pacific time —
Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels
David Finlay vs. Jonah
Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari
Brody King vs. Dave Dutra
Karl Fredericks & Kevin Knight vs. Bateman & Misterioso
TJP vs. The DKC
Eddie Kingston vs. TBA
Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos
Royce Isaacs vs. Lucas Riley
Juice Robinson vs. Bad Dude Tito
Clark Connors & Jordan Clearwater vs. Chris Bey & Hikuleo
This was the next installment of New Japan Showdown tapings from 2300 Arena f.k.a. the ECW Arena in Philadelphia.
Alex Coughlin Challenge Match Series: Jonathan Gresham defeated Alex Coughlin
New Japan’s “Challenge Match Series” is usually a pre-graduation routine, a series of matches where rookie Young Lions take on top talent. This happens right before they transition to a higher position on the card and get new tights and/or a gimmick. Alex Coughlin looks to be the next graduate from the LA Dojo, and his first match was against ROH’s Jonathan Gresham.
Gresham’s last appearances with NJPW were at the 2019 Super J-Cup tournament shows, pre-pandemic.
They shook hands before the bout. The two traded headlock takeovers. They got tied up in the corner, both tangled up in a collar-and-elbow, and neither wanted to be first to break. This led to some chippiness between the two. They bumped chests. Coughlin shoved Gresham, but the veteran Gresham quickly had rookie Coughlin back on the mat with another headlock takeover.
What’s so great about Gresham is how he injects life into fundamental chain wrestling. He’s never boring, yet he’s not reinventing the wheel in terms of creativity. He’s just that damn good. So much of this match was built on a headlock takeover, and it worked.
Coughlin hung right in there, too. He’s bigger than Gresham, but since Gresham wrestled the smarter, craftier style, thus neutralizing any size advantage Coughlin had. Coughlin escaped eventually and locked in a headscissors hold. When Gresham attempted to bridge out of the headscissors, was able to clasp his hands around Gresham’s waist and deadlift him onto his shoulder—from a seated position, mind you. He threw Gresham to the mat with a gutwrench suplex.
They traded lots of close nearfalls. After exchanging a number of sunset flips and inside cradles, Gresham caught Coughlin with a headscissors pin for the win. This was mid-sequence, too, meaning most of the audience didn’t see it coming. I sure didn’t. It was a nice spin on the headlock takeover-to-headscissors spot we’ve seen in pro wrestling ad nauseam over the years, plus it was a loss that doesn’t take anything away from Coughlin while also enhancing Gresham’s “best pure wrestler in the world” gimmick. This was excellent.
Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Ren Narita, Rocky Romero & the DKC defeated Team Filthy (Danny Limelight, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs & Tom Lawlor) via disqualification
The babyface team stormed the ring and went after Team Filthy before the bell even rang. Rosser’s head was shaved as a result of Lawlor shaving Rosser’s head after a match a few weeks ago, with Lawlor eating his hair. Filthy.
Rosser immediately began biting Lawlor while the rest of the match spilled out onto the floor. Rosser and Lawlor threw wild punches at each other, in and out of the corner. Rosser took off his shirt and choked Lawlor with it, then blew snot-rockets at him. Great energy from everyone here, but particularly Rosser, who was fired-the-hell up. JR Kratos put the kibosh on this after he ambushed Rosser, taking him out with a huge jumping lariat.
Lawlor pounced on top of the fallen Rosser and began strangling him. This is an especially great spot since we know Lawlor is a BJJ black belt and he’s choosing to strangle Rosser with two hands like an angry guy in a bar fight. The rest of Team Filthy came back into the ring and posed over Rosser until the rest of the babyfaces broke things up.
Team Filthy continued to work Rosser over. The West Coast Wrecking Crew and Danny Limelight used a 3-on-1 offense to keep Rosser down. They fed Rosser to Kratos who was waiting for Rosser on the floor. When Kratos went to deadlift suplex Rosser, “Mr. No Days Off ” slipped out and shoved Kratos into the ring post. WCWC came at him from the opposite side, but Rosser took both out with a double-lariat. Danny Limelight darted in, but Rosser launched him into the air, back body dropping him onto Kratos, who was still recovering on the floor. Rosser’s proverbial spirit bar was flashing at this point. He drilled Lawlor with a gutbuster on the floor, though I’m not sure who that would’ve hurt worse, him or Lawlor.
Ren Narita and Royce Isaacs were in together next. Narita scored a two-count with a beautiful single-arm suplex. Narita might have the best bridge in the business right now. Jorel Nelson broke up the pin. The DKC jumped in next and unleashed some kiai power onto Isaacs, chopping him up in the corner before whipping him to Narita for a release front suplex. DKC and Karl Fredericks showed off nice double-team work.
Isaacs, the legal man for Team Filthy, caught Fredericks with a pop-up kneelift, then tagged out to Limelight. Fredericks planted Limelight with a spinebuster after Limelight was doing the cha-cha. Romero tagged in next and he and Limelight then got into it.
Later, Lawlor and Rosser brawled again in the ring, doing their own rendition of the Frye-Takayama endless punches spot.
Limelight almost landed his patented double-jump swinging DDT, but Romero cut him off and turned it into a falcon arrow-to-armbar submission attempt. The match ended when a masked and hooded wrestler entered the ring and began hitting Romero with a black kendo stick.
The wrestler then removed his hoodie and was revealed to be the new Black Tiger, or as Alex Koslov called him on commentary, “the Black Tiger Mask.” Black Tiger laid Romero out with a tombstone piledriver. He appears to be aligned with Team Filthy.
Tiger, Lawlor and Kratos beat on Rosser in the ring. The crowd chanted “F*CK YOU KRATOS,” then “SHUT THE F*CK UP” at Tom Lawlor when he got on the mic.
“I’m sick and damn tired of Rocky Romero gettin’ his ass off SoundCloud and into the ring! I’m so sick of hearing about how far Darren has come in the past few years!” Lawlor went on to explain that the new Black Tiger hadn’t come back to haunt him, but to end him. He’d then put his foot across Rosser’s neck. The crowd started chanting “FRED,” a retort to Lawlor’s “Darrren (Young)” comment earlier.
In the post-match promo backstage, Lawlor explained that he believed Rocky Romero had been with NJPW for 20 years and was abusing his power. He accused Romero of trying to “hold everybody down” and that he was sick of it. He said Team Filthy deserves all of the top spots in Japan. Lawlor called out “Darren” (Fred Rosser) for threatening to come to his house and beat him up. He said Rosser wasn’t man enough to ever do something like that.
By the end of this promo, it felt like it turned into an old-school Survivor Series team interview, with most of Team Filthy eyeballing the camera while Lawlor cut his promo on Rosser.
After a break, we saw NJPW Young Lion Gabriel Kidd make his post-pandemic return. Kidd was previously based out of Japan and had a number of awesome matches with Yota Tsuji, Ren Narita and Yuya Uemura (among others) over the past few years.
Kidd got on the mic and said he would be at New Japan’s Detonation show in Riverside, CA. He said that he saw fellow Young Lion Alex Coughlin’s match with Jonathan Gresham earlier in the night and that he liked it very much. He called Gresham out to the ring next and implied he wanted a match with him in Riverside at Detonation.
Gresham came to the ring. Before handing him the mic, Kidd explained how much respect he had for Gresham and what he’d done for wrestling, but that if he thought he could ever out-wrestle a British wrestler, he’d be mistaken.
Gresham explained that he didn’t even know who Kidd was, but that it wasn’t a knock, it was just that Gresham hadn’t been paying attention to NJPW recently. He said that he was impressed with Kidd’s training partner, Alex Coughlin, and that he was sure Kidd was at least as good or better than Coughlin, and that he’d gladly accept his challenge for a match in California. The two would shake hands and Gresham would then exit the ring.
Before the segment ended, Kidd grabbed the mic once more and told the crowd that if they were going through hard times these days to not give up, to keep steppin’ and to speak up, because no one is alone.
Daniel Garcia & Violence Unlimited (Brody King & Chris Dickinson) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso)
This was a fun but relatively short match that the crowd loved. Dickinson and Brown mixed it up first. Brown went toe-to-toe with Dickinson, but the bigger “Dirty Daddy” stamped him out with a hard shoulder block before he tagged young phenom Daniel Garcia in for some double-team offense. Brody King and Misterioso got into it later. The crowd loved King.
Garcia systematically tore through the Stray Dog Army. He, King, and Dickinson locked all three Stray Dogs in simultaneous submission holds.
Bateman used a Northern Lights bomb variation on King to lay him out. Dickinson and Garcia were able to save King from the Stray Dog 3-on-1 attack. King would then power bomb Barrett Brown onto the rest of the wrestlers on the floor, Mike Awesome-style. Violence Unlimited and Garcia put the Stray Dog Army away with tandem piledrivers (plus one Gonzo Bomb from King, the legal man).
Philadelphia Street Fight: Suzuki-gun (Lance Archer & Minoru Suzuki) defeat Eddie Kingston & Jon Moxley
This was taped before Jon Moxley’s hiatus.
Before the match, they aired a production package made up of mostly past AEW footage of the four wrestlers going at it on a past episode of Dynamite.
Archer came out first and took out a few Young Lions standing ringside. Vintage Archer. The crowd went wild for “Kaze Ni Nare” as usual.
Retired NJPW referee Tiger Hattori joined Matt Rehwoldt and Alex Koslov on commentary
When Moxley and Kingston were in the ring with Suzuki-gun before the bell, Suzuki and Mox began poking and shoving each other.
Suzuki knocked Kingston out cold with a forearm shot. Suzuki terrorized with a kendo stick. Hattori said on commentary that Suzuki has a lot of experience doing kendo.
The fight spilled to the backstage area, and then the backlot. I got deja vu as all four brawled into the parking lot area, which ECW fans have seen a number of times over the years in famous promos and matches. Archer did the 1996 Kevin Nash–Rey Mysterio lawn-dart-into-side-of-truck spot to Mox. Suzuki choked Moxley with the top part of a folding chair.
Something may have happened inside the arena at this point in the match. People started booing just as Eddie Kingston threw a cinderblock at Archer but missed. Rehwoldt mentioned the inside feed may have cut out. Not entirely sure what was happening inside the venue, but the match quickly moved back inside the arena.
Suzuki brought a traffic cone into the venue, hitting Kingston over the head with it. Then, he whacked Kingston a couple times with a kendo stick and bowed, then respectfully placed the stick near the announcers table.
Archer strangled Kingston with a dustpan. He and Suzuki beat on Kingston inside the ring, this time with kendo sticks. Suzuki wound up and swung like a baseball player, then placed the stick under Kingston’s arm for an armbar with the extra kendo stick leverage.
Mox reappeared and came with an unhinged door in hand. The crowd started chanting “E-C-W!” though I can’t recall a time when someone in ECW ever used a door. Mox grabbed someone’s sign because someone had written “MOX USE MY SIGN!” on it. He ripped off the paper and revealed the object to be a stop sign. I wonder how the fan got a hold of that.
Moxley slid the door into the ring and would eventually dropkick Archer through it as it was set up against the turnbuckle. The crowd chanted “this is awesome.”
Archer would later level Kingston with a full nelson slam, but Kingston powered up and landed two urakens and a DDT for two—Suzuki made a last minute save. He put Kingston in a guillotine choke. Suzuki went for the Gotch-Style piledriver but Mox broke it up. Finally, Suzuki-gun put the match away after Archer pinned Kingston with a Blackout onto a garbage can.
Afterwards, Archer grabbed a mic and ordered a cameraman onto the apron. He then told Kingston that he was sick of Kingston screwing him out of matches and titles. He said this was for disrespecting Suzuki-gun. He’d then talk about his then-upcoming match with Kingston as part of AEW’s World Title Eliminator tournament. Suzuki threw the mic at Kingston and said “We are Suzuki-gun!” before leaving ringside.
Kingston grabbed the mic and said something too, but it was garbled because NJPW bleeped a word and you couldn’t hear the end of what he said because it was so short. So, Eddie Kingston said something. And it was probably vulgar, as you’d expect.
Final thoughts:
This was a top-tier edition of NJPW Strong. The opener between Coughlin and Gresham was an excellent opener; the tag matches in between had tons of fire and the Rosser vs. Lawlor angle for the Openweight title has been arguably the best long-term angle in the show’s short history; the main event was a hell of a main event brawl with more grit and grime than the AEW version.
From quality to action to star power, this show had a bit of everything for everyone, especially if you like your wrestling to be a little more rough-and-tumble than the usual.
The 28th NJPW Best of the Super Juniors tournament continued today in Korakuen Hall.
Hiromu Takahashi faced BUSHI in the main event, while tag partners Taiji Ishimori and El Phantasmo battled in the semi-main.
The other tournament action was comprised of El Desperado vs. DOUKI, SHO vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru, Robbie Eagles vs. YOH, and Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Master Wato.
Kosei Fujita and Ryohei Oiwa faced off in the non-tournament opener.
Here are today’s results:
Kosei Fujita drew with Ryohei Oiwa (10:00)
The Young Lions went to a time limit draw.
Best of the Super Juniors: Master Wato defeated Ryusuke Taguchi (12:09)
Wato won by pinfall with the RPP.
Best of the Super Juniors: YOH defeated Robbie Eagles (13:48)
YOH got his first win of the tournament with the Five Star Clutch.
Best of the Super Juniors: Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated SHO (8:08)
Kanemaru stole a win with a rollup and continues his improbably great tournament.
Best of the Super Juniors: El Desperado defeated DOUKI (15:08)
Desperado won by submission with Numero Dos.
Best of the Super Juniors: El Phantasmo defeated Taiji Ishimori (15:53)
ELP caught Ishimori in a cradle to steal the victory.
Best of the Super Juniors: Hiromu Takahashi defeated BUSHI (21:16)
Four matches have been announced this week’s NJPW Strong. The episode will be the finale of the New Japan Showdown series of episodes.
In the main event, Jon Moxley and Eddie Kingston will face Minoru Suzuki and Lance Archer in a street fight.
In the semi-main, Brody King, Chris Dickinson and Daniel Garcia will take on Barrett Brown, Bateman and Misterioso in a trios bout.
Also set for this week’s episode, Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson and Danny Limelight will face Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita and The DKC in a ten-man tag.
In the opener, Jonathan Gresham will take on Alex Coughlin.
The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.
Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing.
Here is Saturday’s full lineup:
NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night four, Saturday, November 27, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–
Philadelphia street fight: Jon Moxley & Eddie Kingston vs. Minoru Suzuki & Lance Archer
Brody King, Chris Dickinson & Daniel Garcia vs. Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso
Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson & Danny Limelight vs. Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita & The DKC
Another talent announcement has been made for NJPW’s taping in Los Angeles on Thursday, December 9.
Eddie Kingston will make his second-ever appearance for the company at the Nemesis event. Kingston’s only prior NJPW show came at the Strong New Japan Showdown taping in Philadelphia in October, where Kingston teamed with Jon Moxley against Minoru Suzuki and Lance Archer in a street fight.
Talent and match announcements have been coming quickly for Nemesis. Just yesterday, NJPW announced Brody King vs. Dave Dutra, TJP vs. The DKC, plus Karl Fredericks and Kevin Knight vs. Bateman and Misterioso.
Also set for Los Angeles are Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels, Jonah vs. David Finlay, and Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari.
Here is the announced lineup so far:
NJPW Strong Nemesis, Thursday, December 9, 7 p.m. Pacific time —
Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels
David Finlay vs. Jonah
Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari
Brody King vs. Dave Dutra
Karl Fredericks & Kevin Knight vs. Bateman & Misterioso
The 28th NJPW Best of the Super Juniors tournament continued today in Aichi.
IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion El Desperado took on Hiromu Takahashi in the main event, while former champion Robbie Eagles faced El Phantasmo in the semi-main.
The other tournament action was comprised of SHO vs. BUSHI, Ryusuke Taguchi vs. YOH, Master Wato vs. Taiji Ishimori, and Yoshinobu Kanemaru vs. DOUKI.
Yuto Nakashima and Ryohei Oiwa faced off in the non-tournament opener.
Here are today’s results:
Yuto Nakashima drew with Ryohei Oiwa (10:00)
The Young Lions went to a time limit draw.
Best of the Super Juniors: Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated DOUKI (10:35)
Kanemaru won by pinfall after a brainbuster.
Best of the Super Juniors: Taiji Ishimori defeated Master Wato (11:21)
Ishimori won by submission with the Bone Lock.
Best of the Super Juniors: Ryusuke Taguchi defeated YOH (14:36)
Taguchi won by pinfall after hitting Dodon.
Best of the Super Juniors: SHO defeated BUSHI (12:58)
SHO won by referee stoppage with Snake Bite.
Best of the Super Juniors: Robbie Eagles defeated El Phantasmo (19:03)
Eagles countered CR II into a hurricanrana for the pin.
Best of the Super Juniors: El Desperado drew with Hiromu Takahashi (30:00)
NJPW has added three matches to the Strong Nemesis taping in Los Angeles on December 9.
Making his NJPW debut, Dave Dutra will face Brody King. Dutra is a veteran of the indie scene and has appeared in an enhancement role on AEW Dark and WWE 205 Live this year.
Additionally, United Empire’s TJP will be in singles action against The DKC.
Also added, Karl Fredericks and Kevin Knight will take on Bateman and Misterioso.
The three new matches join the already announced Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels, Jonah vs. David Finlay, and Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari matches on the Nemesis card at the Vermont Hollywood.
Here is the lineup:
NJPW Strong Nemesis, Thursday, December 9, 7 p.m. Pacific time —
Jay White vs. Christopher Daniels
David Finlay vs. Jonah
Alex Zayne vs. Ariya Daivari
Brody King vs. Dave Dutra
Karl Fredericks & Kevin Knight vs. Bateman & Misterioso
Night three of Wrestle Kingdom 16 will feature talent from both NJPW and Pro Wrestling NOAH. The announcement was made in a joint press conference with the two promotions.
NJPW’s Kazuchika Okada, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Shingo Takagi and NOAH’s Kaito Kiyomiya, Keiji Muto and Katsuhiko Nakajima have been announced for the event on Saturday, January 8, 2022 at Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan, at 3 a.m. Eastern time. No matches have been made official as of yet.
The card will air live on Abema pay-per-view and have an English language option for the broadcast. The cost will be 3960 Yen. The show will be made available on NJPW World and NOAH’s Wrestle Universe streaming service one week after the air date. A portion of proceeds from the event and PPV will be donated to Japanese Red Cross.
Tanahashi and company president Takami Ohbari represented NJPW at the presser, while CyberFight director Akihiro Takeda and Kiyomiya represented NOAH. Comments from the card’s other announced participants were shown via video.
“The match card is yet to be announced. NJPW and NOAH wrestlers have their own histories and backgrounds. It’s up to them whether they want to face off, or even join together…
This is a rare opportunity, and it would be a somewhat of a waste not to have the two companies face off across the whole card.”
The press conference can be seen below with English subtitles.
As was teased at NJPW Strong Detonation, “The Fallen Angel” Christopher Daniels will take on “Switchblade” Jay White. White issued the challenge to Daniels on Monday in Riverside, Daniels was announced for Nemesis on Tuesday, then the match was made official today.
Also announced, Jonah will face David Finlay. This match was set up at NJPW Battle in the Valley when Jonah made his promotional debut by attacking Finlay and his tag partner Juice Robinson. Jonah made his in-ring debut at Detonation in Riverside.
A rematch from the Showdown episodes of Strong is also set for Los Angeles, as Alex Zayne will take on Ariya Daivari.
NJPW Strong Nemesis will take place on December 9 at the Vermont Hollywood. Tickets for the event are on sale now.