A NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Championship match and an IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Championship match will headline NJPW’s Road to Dominion tour.
On Wednesday, June 2 in Korakuen Hall, Hirooki Goto, Tomohiro Ishii and YOSHI-HASHI will defend the NEVER Six-Man titles against Tetsuya Naito, SANADA and BUSHI.
That match was set up on the Road to Wrestle Grand Slam tour. After Naito and SANADA defeated Goto and YOSHI-HASHI in the main event of the May 26 show, Naito issued a challenge. YOSHI-HASHI accepted the challenge on behalf of his team, then was attacked three-on-one by Naito, SANADA and BUSHI. Goto ran in to make the save for YOSHI-HASHI.
On Tuesday, June 1 in Korakuen Hall, Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa will defend the IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team titles against Zack Sabre Jr. and Taichi.
That bout is a rematch from Wrestle Kingdom 15 on January 4 and The New Beginning in Hiroshima on February 10. Tonga and Loa defeated Sabre and Taichi for the titles at Wrestle Kingdom, then beat them in a rematch in Hiroshima.
Tuesday’s Road to Dominion event will air for free on NJPW World. A Road to Dominion show is also currently scheduled for Friday, June 5, but no card has been announced. Three matches have been announced for Dominion, which was moved from June 6 to June 7.
Here are the lineups announced so far for the Dominion tour:
NJPW Road to Dominion, Tuesday, June 1, 5:30 a.m. Eastern time, free on NJPW World —
IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Championship: Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa (c) vs. Taichi & Zack Sabre Jr.
Kazuchika Okada, Hirooki Goto, Tomohiro Ishii & YOSHI-HASHI vs. Shingo Takagi, Tetsuya Naito, SANADA & BUSHI
Kota Ibushi & Yota Tsuji vs. Jeff Cobb & Great-O-Khan
Hiroshi Tanahashi, Tomoaki Honma, Tiger Mask & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. EVIL, Chase Owens, Taiji Ishimori & El Phantasmo
YOH, SHO & Yuya Uemura vs. Minoru Suzuki, El Desperado & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
NJPW Road to Dominion, Wednesday, June 2, 5:30 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Championship: Hirooki Goto, Tomohiro Ishii & YOSHI-HASHI (c) vs. Tetsuya Naito, SANADA & BUSHI
Kota Ibushi & Master Wato vs. Jeff Cobb & Great-O-Khan
Taichi, Zack Sabre Jr. & Minoru Suzuki vs. Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa & Jado
YOH, SHO & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. El Desperado, Yoshinobu Kanemaru & DOUKI
Hiroshi Tanahashi, Tomoaki Honma, Yota Tsuji & Yuya Uemura vs. EVIL, Chase Owens, Taiji Ishimori & El Phantasmo
NJPW Road to Dominion, Friday, June 5, 5:30 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
Card to be announced
NJPW Dominion, Monday, June 7, 3 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
IWGP World Heavyweight Championship: Kazuchika Okada vs. Shingo Takagi
Kota Ibushi vs. Jeff Cobb
IWGP Jr. Heavyweight Championship: El Desperado (c) vs. YOH
AJZ is a new face who debuted recently. Big bodybuilder-type who can move relatively well. Wears a gold bandana and puts his hair in a bun like a genie.
He and Connors grappled mid-ring early on with Connors getting the better of it. At about halfway through, they took the match to the floor and brawled there for a while, trading hard forearms. Back in the ring, the taller AJZ rushed Connors and took him down, then laid in a dozen wild punches from a mounted position.
The gritty Connors returned AJZ’s offense later with a few vertical suplexes. AJZ did a springboard kneedrop. Connors wrapped this match up after a snap powerslam and a backdrop bomb, pinning AJZ in dominant fashion, then touching him up a bit after the bell to let AJZ know whose house this really was.
El Phantasmo defeated Wheeler Yuta
This was El Phantasmo’s return to the show after recently showing up on IMPACT.
This was Wheeler Yuta’s second appearance on NJPW Strong, where he had a good match with Rocky Romero earlier this year. He came to the ring wearing a flashy Mortal Kombat-style facemask.
Phantasmo was verbally bullying the ring boys before the match. He also attempted to get a chant going through clapping despite no fans in attendance. Announcer Alex Koslov suggested it may have been for the fans at home. The match itself got underway a few moments later. Both were impressive in the opening minutes on the mat. ELP finally got the upper hand after raking Yuta’s eyes.
From here, the pace began to quicken. Yuta went for a frankensteiner but Phantasmo used a cartwheel to move out of the way. He landed a nice dropkick that knocked ELP out of the ring. Phantasmo then chose to stay outside until the count of 19, recovering as much as he was legally allowed to while on the floor.
Back in the ring, Phantasmo challenged Yuta to a Test of Strength, but it was a trick, because ELP twisted Yuta’s wrist backwards as soon as they locked fingers. He took Yuta down and worked over his arm a bit before climbing to the top rope for his signature rope-walking routine. ELP followed up a nipple-twist with a cross bodyblock off the ropes. That’s not a sentence I expected to type today.
Yuta rallied back with an Olympic Slam after Phantasmo had worked him over a few minutes longer. Yuta landed a crossbody block off the top ropes for two. More than ten minutes had elapsed at this point. Yuta attempted a possible superplex or another type of top-rope maneuver but ELP bit Yuta’s fingers, then knocked him off the ropes. ELP landed Thunderkiss ‘85 for a close two-count. Yuta came back and scored a close call after a German suplex with a bridge. He locked on a modified STF next, but again, ELP bit his way out of danger. He then landed Sudden Death, his “loaded” superkick, to put Yuta down for the count. Good match.
In a backstage promo, El Phantasmo said that Wheeler Yuta was yet another “indie darling” has felt the “most accurate and deadly” finisher in all of pro wrestling, Sudden Death. He had the cameraman point downwards so ELP could show off his right foot, which he claimed was “money.”
Between matches, a quick vignette aired for NJPW’s Ignition tour, which starts next week on NJPW Strong.
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (c) defeated Chris Dickinson to retain
If you’re a fan of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport, this is must-watch. This felt like something straight out of Japan in the mid-1990s.
NJPW aired a nice package of the build between these two ahead of the match. The story is that Chris Dickinson, who was initially a member of Team Filthy, was basically outed from the group once he challenged Tom Lawlor for his Strong Openweight title, which Lawlor captured by winning this year’s New Japan Cup USA.
JR Kratos and Danny Limelight cornered Lawlor tonight.
Both Lawlor and Dickinson were cautious throwing strikes early on. Lawlor landed a low kick. He accused Dickinson of pulling his hair after the two exchanged holds on the mat. Dickinson aka Bas Rutten Jr. threw more kicks as the bout went on. After Lawlor missed a spinning heel kick off the ropes, Dickinson blasted him with a shoulder block.
The match spilled out onto the floor next. Lawlor begged off for long enough to throw a cheap kick into Dickinson’s gut. The two brawled on the apron until Lawlor was able to catch one of Dickinson’s kicks and wrap it over the ropes, effectively trapping Dickinson and allowing Lawlor to snap Dickinson’s neck over the cable with a stun gun.
Lawlor bullied Dickinson into the red corner, working him over not with MMA technique just lots of back-alley fists. Dickinson powered up after a while of this, and after eating a few more shots from Lawlor, he cursed him out and unloaded a half-dozen chops on Lawlor, forcing him into the same red corner. Dickinson stormed at Lawlor, who he had whipped into the opposite corner, but Lawlor caught him, then put him down with a spinebuster for two. Ten minutes had gone by at this point.
Lawlor then went after Dickinson’s knee and quickly had him locked in a figure-four leglock until Dickinson broke the hold by grabbing the ropes. Lawlor later locked Dickinson in a sleeperhold while sitting on the top rope for that extra leverage, but Dickinson was able to counter out of the hold. He then super-plex’d Lawlor from the top rope back into the ring. Beautiful execution. Lawlor sold like he’d just broken his back or tailbone.
Dickinson charged at Lawlor in the corner with lariats, but Lawlor countered out and locked in another sleeperhold. Dickinson reversed, then planted Lawlor with a Death Valley Bomb for a close two-count.
Danny Limelight jumped onto the apron, but Dickinson took him out with a forearm. JR Kratos was standing on the apron of the opposite side of the ring. When Dickinson walked over to get into it with Kratos, Brody King arrived and took Kratos out himself. King, clad in a fresh NJPW jacket, is actually a part of a new faction with Dickinson in ROH called Violence Unlimited. He and Kratos brawled to the back, away from the ring.
Lawlor had collected himself and locked Dickinson in a sleeperhold again. Dickinson rolled over his shoulder to escape the hold, then spiked Lawlor with a brainbuster for two. The ring announcer made the 15-minute call moments later. Dickinson landed an enzuigiri before locking in a STF hold. Lawlor looked to be in trouble before he was able to break the hold with a rope-break.
After slapping himself in the face a few times, Dickinson deadlifted Lawlor into a release German suplex. Dickinson went for another, but Lawlor but this time Lawlor blocked it by grapevining his leg around Dickinson’s. He was able to collapse Dickinson onto the mat and lock in a Kimura hold before spiking him with a Tenzan-styled tombstone piledriver for a two-count.
Lawlor began slapping Dickinson around. Dickinson didn’t take kindly to this and began unloading sharp chops and palm strikes of his own. I wonder how these two felt the morning after this. Lawlor locked Dickinson into a cravat hold and threw knees before launching him with a release Northern Lights suplex. He used a stalling Olympic Slam before floating over into a guillotine choke. Dickinson got his ankle on the bottom rope for a break. 20 minutes had elapsed at this point.
Dickinson threw a flurry of kicks, but Lawlor was able to catch one and lock in another sleeper. Dickinson reversed, but Lawlor kept wrist-control and used a tomoe nage sweep that gave Lawlor back control, which allowed him to again lock in the sleeperhold. I’ve only seen that sort of move used in BJJ, so this might be the first we’ve seen of this technique on television.
The fiery Dickinson screamed and went for a running lariat, but Lawlor sidestepped and locked on the sleeper one more time before dumping Dickinson on his head with a vicious sleeper suplex for the pin. Lawlor retains on his first defense of the Strong Openweight title.
Danny Limelight and Tom Lawlor celebrated backstage afterwards, but were quickly interrupted by “Alpha Wolf” Karl Fredericks, who walked up to Lawlor and gekiochi-kun’d Lawlor’s title before calling him a “chump” instead of “champ.”
“That’s pretty cool, Tom.” Fredericks eyeballed Lawlor’s title while Lawlor waved him off. Fredericks’ holds a pin over Lawlor from the multi-person tag match which stipulated that whomever pinned Lawlor in said match would earn a Strong Openweight title shot against the winner of tonight’s bout between Lawlor and Dickinson.
After Fredericks left, Limelight celebrated Lawlor being the longest-reigning (also only) Strong Openweight champion. Lawlor referred to Fredericks as “Blue Wolf” during this, which is a deep-cut reference for any old school NJPW or PRIDE fans out there. It’s also funny because Blue Wolf was awful.
Final thoughts:
Go out of your way to watch the main event, because it was one of the best matches on the show this year. It was definitely better and felt more important than anything from NJPW’s recent three-match run at Korakuen Hall this week. Hats off to both Lawlor and Dickinson who gave us a solid, no-frills main event that felt important. Despite losing, Dickinson feels stronger than ever on NJPW Strong, while Lawlor is now firmly the first non-Bullet Club regular to function as top heel on the show. I hope this isn’t considered a conflict of interest, but “Filthy” Tom was freakin’ great in this.
A new IWGP World Heavyweight Champion will be crowned at NJPW Dominion.
NJPW has announced that Kazuchika Okada will face Shingo Takagi for the vacant title.
The IWGP World Heavyweight Championship has been vacant since May 20, when NJPW revealed that former title holder Will Ospreay had vacated the title to return to the United Kingdom to seek treatment for a neck injury.
Okada had been scheduled to face Ospreay for the title at Wrestle Grand Slam at the Tokyo Dome on Saturday, May 29, a show that has been postponed indefinitely. Shingo challenged Ospreay for the title at Wrestling Dontaku on May 4 in a losing effort, but beat Okada in this year’s New Japan Cup.
NJPW also announced that Dominion will now take place on Monday, June 7 in Osaka-Jo Hall. The show was originally scheduled for Sunday, June 6, but a state of emergency in Osaka related to the COVID-19 pandemic was extended through that weekend.
In addition to the IWGP World title match, two other matches were announced for Dominion.
El Desperado will defend the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against YOH. That match had been scheduled for Wrestling Dontaku on May 4, but the match was pulled from the show due to COVID-19 protocols. Desperado later revealed that he had battled COVID.
The other match set for Dominion is Kota Ibushi vs. Jeff Cobb. The first angle for this match was shot at Sakura Genesis back in April, as Cobb laid out Ibushi after Ibushi lost the IWGP World title to Ospreay.
Here is the lineup for Dominion so far:
NJPW Dominion, Monday, June 7, 3 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
IWGP World Heavyweight Championship: Kazuchika Okada vs. Shingo Takagi
Kota Ibushi vs. Jeff Cobb
IWGP Jr. Heavyweight Championship: El Desperado (c) vs. YOH
The Road to Wrestle Grand Slam tour continued today as NJPW ran their third straight night in Korakuen Hall.
A new set of challengers for the NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team titles were established, as Tetsuya Naito, SANADA and BUSHI made a challenge for Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI to defend the titles against them at an upcoming show. YOSHI-HASHI accepted the challenge on behalf of his team.
The show was also notable for the return of Kazuchika Okada.
Okada kicked off the show by cutting a promo. He said that he feels great and wants to challenge for the vacant IWGP World Heavyweight Championship.
Here are results from today’s show:
Shingo Takagi defeated Yota Tsuji (11:09)
Shingo won by referee stoppage after a forearm strike and a choke.
Tanahashi used a Texas Clover Hold to submit Yujiro.
Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa defeated Zack Sabre Jr. & DOUKI (11:56)
Loa pinned DOUKI after hitting three powerbombs.
Great-O-Khan & Jeff Cobb defeated Kota Ibushi & Tomoaki Honma (12:04)
Cobb pinned Honma after a Tour of the Islands.
Cobb laid Ibushi out after the match with a Cobb-igoye.
Tetsuya Naito & SANADA defeated Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI (23:24)
Naito pinned YH with a jackknife cradle.
After the match, Naito issued a challenge for the NEVER Six-Man titles. YOSHI-HASHI came back to the ring to accept, but got jumped three-on-one by Naito, SANADA and BUSHI. Goto ran back in to make the save for YH.
**********
Up next are three Road to Dominion shows next week on June 1, June 2 and June 4, all at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World. Dominion will be held on Sunday, June 6 in Osaka-Jo Hall at 3 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World. No cards have been announced for the tour.
A new set of challengers for the NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team titles were established at today’s NJPW Road to Wrestle Grand Slam event.
Tetsuya Naito, SANADA and BUSHI challenged NEVER Six-Man Champions Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI to a title match at a later date.
Naito and SANADA defeated Goto and YOSHI-HASHI in the main event of today’s event. Naito pinned YOSHI-HASHI with a jackknife cradle. After the match, Naito cut a promo and said that while his stablemate Shingo Takagi has his sights set on the IWGP World title, Naito wants some gold as well. Naito then issued the challenge.
YOSHI-HASHI returned to the ring after the main event to accept the challenge, but was laid out by Naito, SANADA and BUSHI. Goto ran in to make the save for his partner. Ishii was not booked on today’s show, but his interactions with Naito had been heavily focused on on Monday and Tuesday’s Road to Wrestle Grand Slam events.
The NEVER Six-Man title match, as well as the rest of the cards for next week’s Road to Dominion events should be announced imminently. To this point, zero matches have been announced for the June 1, June 2, June 4 Road to Dominion shows, nor for the Dominion event itself. Dominion will take place on Sunday, June 6 in Osaka-Jo Hall.
Kazuchika Okada appeared in person for the first time since testing positive for COVID-19 tonight at Korakuen Hall.
He appeared at the start of tonight’s Road to Wrestle Grand Slam event. He said he was doing great. He spent most of the promo talking about still wanting his match for the IWGP World Heavyweight title at Wrestle Grand Slam in Tokyo Dome. He closed the promo by saying that next time people see him, he will be in his ring gear.
Okada was pulled from the second night of Wrestling Dontaku and was later confirmed to have COVID-19. Taichi and El Desperado have also since confirmed that they too have tested positive. NJPW has confirmed that nine wrestlers overall tested positive following their May 4 event.
Will Ospreay and Okada were scheduled to meet in the main event of Wrestle Grand Slam at the Tokyo Dome. However, Ospreay vacated the IWGP World Heavyweight title on May 21 due to a neck injury. Both the Tokyo and Yokohama Wrestle Grand Slam events were delayed due to the state of emergency in Japan being extended through the end of the month.
El Desperado is the latest NJPW talent to reveal his COVID-19 diagnosis.
In a Twitter thread he posted tonight on social media, Desperado detailed the symptoms he has been dealing with during his illness, including general muscle joint pain, a high fever, “unbelievable” back pain, “the most dizziness I’ve ever had”, and a terrible cough. He ended his thread by thanking the staff and nurses in Tokyo.
Desperado is the latest NJPW talent to confirm he has tested positive for COVID-19, with Kazuchika Okada and Taichi in recent days also confirming their status. NJPW has confirmed that nine wrestlers have tested positive following the second night of Wrestling Dontaku.
Desperado was originally scheduled to defend the IWGP Junior Heavyweight title against YOH on the second night of Wrestling Dontaku. However, both men were removed from the card, and the title match never took place. Desperado has been champion since February 28, winning a three way match for the vacant title that also included El Phantasmo and BUSHI.
The Road to Wrestle Grand Slam tour continued today as NJPW ran their second of three straight nights in Korakuen Hall.
The focus of the show was on Kota Ibushi vs. Jeff Cobb, which will likely be a match for Dominion on June 6.
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Tetsuya Naito in a singles match, plus Ishii, Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI defending the NEVER Openweight Six-Man titles against Naito, SANADA and BUSHI look to be upcoming matches as well.
There has still not been an announcement regarding the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, vacated by Will Ospreay.
By process of elimination, Shingo Takagi vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi for the vacant title in a rematch of a match of the year contender from The New Beginning in Nagoya on January 30 seems likely.
Naito and Ishii had to be pulled apart after the match. They continue to tease both a singles match with Naito and Ishii, as well as a NEVER Six-Man Tag title match with Goto, Ishii & YOSHI-HASHI defending against Naito, SANADA & BUSHI.
Kota Ibushi & Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Great-O-Khan & Jeff Cobb (15:53)
Ibushi pinned O-Khan after a Kamigoye.
Ibushi and Cobb stared each other down after the match. That singles match has been teased for quite some time and should be announced for Dominion any day now.
**********
Here is the lineup for tomorrow’s show:
NJPW Road to Wrestle Grand Slam, Wednesday, May 26, 5:30 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
Tetsuya Naito & SANADA vs. Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI
Kota Ibushi & Tomoaki Honma vs. Great-O-Khan & Jeff Cobb
NJPW has revealed the full lineup for this week’s Collision episode of Strong.
El Phantasmo will be in action against Wheeler Yuta. Yuta lost to Rocky Romero in his Strong debut on the April 23 episode.
In Friday’s opener, Clark Connors will face AJZ. AJZ also lost to Romero in his Strong debut on the May 14 episode. Connors lost to Karl Fredericks in his last singles match on Strong on the April 30 LA Dojo Showcase edition of the show.
Friday’s main event was announced previously, as “Filthy” Tom Lawlor will make his first defense of the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship, taking on Chris Dickinson.
Strong airs Fridays at 10 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World and is available on demand shortly after airing.
Here is Friday’s full lineup:
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Chris Dickinson
New Japan Pro Wrestling’s Kazuchika Okada and Taichi revealed that they have tested positive for COVID-19.
Tokyo Sports reported that Okada confirmed in a recent interview that he had tested positive. He said that he felt sick and had lost his sense of taste, but it has since returned. Taichi confirmed to Tokyo Sports that he also tested positive. He appeared on this morning’s Road to Wrestle Grand Slam event via video and said had a high fever, but is recovering now.
Okada was pulled from the second night of Wrestling Dontaku on May 4 when two participants in a match he took part in the night prior had fevers. He and others involved in that match were removed from the second night’s card. NJPW later announced that nine people had tested positive for COVID-19, causing the company to cancel their shows through May 22 when they resumed their schedule.
Taichi competed in the second night of Dontaku, but has not wrestled on the current tour.
Wrestle Grand Slam in Tokyo Dome was scheduled to have an IWGP World Champion Will Ospreay vs. Okada title match. However, the event and the other Wrestle Grand Slam show in Yokohama were delayed due to the COVID-19 emergency in Japan being extended through the end of the month.
Ospreay has since vacated the title, returning to the United Kingdom to seek treatment for a neck injury.
NJPW World broadcast their first event in 20 days today, a Road to Wrestle Grand Slam show from Korakuen Hall in Tokyo.
NJPW returned to action on Saturday after an 18-day break following the May 4 Wrestling Dontaku event.
A state of emergency in Tokyo and other prefectures in Japan forced the postponement of the Road to Wrestle Grand Slam tour and both planned Wrestle Grand Slam stadium shows.
While the Road to Wrestle Grand Slam tour started on Saturday, new dates for the stadium shows have yet to be announced.
This was a solid opening match between the returning Batemen and Young Lion Alex Coughlin. We last saw Batemen in March in the New Japan Cup USA tournament, where he was eliminated by Brody King.
This was a trudge of a match, slow and hard-hitting, and in a good way. Coughlin has gotten ridiculously jacked since returning from a neck injury that kept him out for most of 2020. He had the better of the match early on until Batemen used an illegal fish hook to break one of Coughlin’s holds. Batemen feels like a throwback heel with his intentionally un-flashy bully style in the ring.
Coughlin launched himself off the ropes and crashed into Batemen with a flying shoulder tackle, it was more of a human slingshot than anything. Coughlin had Batemen locked in a Fujiwara armbar late, but Batemen came back and put the rookie away with a tombstone piledriver for the win.
Karl Fredericks and Brody King defeated Team Filthy (Danny Limelight and JR Kratos)
Team Filthy bushwhacked Fredericks and King before the bell. This was a fast-paced match, and that’s double-impressive considering how big three of the guys in this match are. Once the bell rang and the match was underway, Limelight worked over Fredericks for a bit, then JR Kratos came in to bring the pain. He threw hard knees at a downed Fredericks. When Limelight was back in, he scraped the edge of his forearm and elbow across Fredericks’ face, a cheap shot behind the ref’s back.
The “Alpha Wolf” eventually escaped Team Filthy’s corner and tagged out to Brody King, who was out for blood upon stepping inside the ring. He delivered a Death Valley Bomb to Limelight into the bottom of the corner post and directly onto a prone Kratos. King then pressed slammed Limelight to the floor. King followed and took the fight to Kratos ringside. Limelight at one point landed double knees for a close two-count.
Fredericks mounted a final comeback in the end, putting Limelight on the mat with Shibata’s patented choke sleeper, then spiking him with Manifest Destiny to pick up the win for his team. Get the “Alpha Wolf” back over to Japan ASAP, I say.
Fredericks cut a short but sweet promo on Team Filthy, explaining that all he had needed was a second to take them out, and tonight he did just that.
Fred Rosser defeated Hikuleo in a no-disqualification match
I can say with confidence that this was the most unique match in NJPW Strong’s short history. Rosser and Hikuleo had a fight, straight up. No flash necessary: This was a rugged, sloppy brawl. I mean that in a positive way, too.
“Mr. No Days Off ” Fred Rosser dove onto Hikuleo before the bell. He came dressed in appropriate brawling attire, which means taped fists and some sort of shirt you don’t normally wear. The match spilled out onto the floor early. As the match got more violent, announcer Alex Koslov claimed that this was “technically a street fight.” Wasn’t it technically a no-disqualification match?
Hikuleo found a table underneath the ring. When he attempted to stand it up, Rosser pegged him dead-center in the back of the head with a plastic bucket and it couldn’t have landed more perfectly. After about five minutes, they brawled past the guardrails and into the backstage area, where Rosser shoved Hikuleo through the swinging exit doors and into boxes of NJPW merchandise. Hikuleo launched Rosser through a door backstage and it looked vicious.
The youngest of Haku’s sons would drag Rosser outside of the building and into the NJPW ring truck. Kevin Kelly made reference to the infamous Dustin Rhodes vs. Blacktop Bully from WCW, one of the few truck-centric matches in pro wrestling history. No need for alarm, though: Tonight’s match was much better than WCW’s “King of the Mountain” affair.
Inside the truck, Rosser choked Hikuleo with his own wrist tape. Hikuleo gave Rosser a low blow, then almost decapitated him with the truck’s sliding door. He tried slamming it down really fast, but Rosser moved out of the way. When Hikuleo lifted the door back up, Rosser kicked Hikuleo, then dove out of the truck onto him. Rosser showered him with fists and choked him with a hose. Or, what looked to be a hose.
Rosser dragged Hikuleo by his long hair back to the ring. Rosser noticed the table that Hikuleo left by the ring earlier in the match. He decided to set it up and try putting Hikuleo through it off the apron. I’m not sure what the plan was, the spot ended with both diving off the apron and onto the table, but it didn’t break. It looked like a disaster, but I can’t honestly call it a botch. It looked completely appropriate after nearly 15 minutes of savage hoss battle. It looked like Rosser took the worst part of the fall, actually.
Rosser later grabbed Hikuleo by the hair and dragged him into the ring, then finally put him away after dropping Hikuleo with a gutbuster and a running knee. What a match. Rosser knocked over a table before exiting the back, still amped up from the donnybrook he took Hikuleo through.
Final thoughts:
Tonight’s show was a nice change in pace from the high-speed action we usually see on NJPW Strong. Each match is worth going out of your way to see, but tonight’s main event between Rosser and Hikuleo was a barnburner of a brawl, no doubt about it. It’s a good example of how two can push the violence without getting gory or over-the-top. For those of us who grew up on Crockett-flavored free-for-alls, this felt like a nod to those days. Rosser was angry, and so was Hikuleo, and they wrestled that way. Rosser wrestled like he was settling a score.
Most of this felt spontaneous, too, which can be exciting. Hats off to both fellows here, as this was probably the best singles bout in either of their careers.
NJPW has revealed full cards for their upcoming Road to Wrestle Grand Slam events.
The first night’s main event, on May 22, will have Hiroshi Tanahashi teaming with Ryusuke Taguchi to take on Shingo Takagi and BUSHI. An eight man tag headlines the May 24 card. May 25 has Tanahashi teaming with Kota Ibushi to take on Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan. May 26 has Tetsuya Naito and SANADA teaming up to take on Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI.
Young Lion Yota Tsuji will also be in singles action on all four shows.
The company is returning to touring after nine wrestlers tested positive for COVID-19 earlier this month. The Wrestle Grand Slam events, which were also scheduled for this month, were delayed due to the COVID-19 state of emergency being extended to the end of May.
The full cards for this coming week’s shows can be seen below:
Saturday, May 22 – Nagoya Congress Center Event Hall
Hiroshi Tanahashi and Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Shingo Takagi and BUSHI
Kota Ibushi and Tomoaki Honma vs. Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan
Hirooki Goto and Tomohiro Ishii vs. Tetsuya Naito and SANADA
Master Wato and Hiroyoshi Tenzan vs. Chase Owens and Gedo
YOSHI-HASHI vs. Yota Tsuji
Monday, May 24 – Korakuen Hall
Hiroshi Tanahashi, Hirooki Goto, Tomohiro Ishii, and YOSHI-HASHI vs. Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi, SANADA, and BUSHI
Kota Ibushi and Master Wato vs. Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan
Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Tomoaki Honma vs. Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa
Zack Sabre Jr. and DOUKI vs. Chase Owens and Gedo
Yujiro Takahashi vs. Yota Tsuji
Tuesday, May 25 – Korakuen Hall
Hiroshi Tanahashi and Kota Ibushi vs. Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan
Hirooki Goto, Tomohiro Ishii, YOSHI-HASHI, and Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Tetsuya Natio, SANADA, Shingo Takagi, and BUSHI
Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Master Wato vs. Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa
Zack Sabre Jr. and DOUKI vs. Taiji Ishimori and Yujiro Takahashi
Chase Owens vs. Yota Tsuji
Wednesday, May 26 – Korakuen Hall
Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI vs. Tetsuya Natio and SANADA
Kota Ibushi and Tomoaki Honma vs. Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan
Zack Sabre Jr. and DOUKI vs. Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa
Hiroshi Tanahashi, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, and Master Wato vs. Taiji Ishimori, Chase Owens, and Yujiro Takahashi
Will Ospreay has vacated the IWGP World heavyweight title as he is out of action with a neck injury.
NJPW released a statement Thursday morning and revealed that Ospreay suffered the injury during the second night of Wrestling Dontaku. They said he would not be participating in the next series of events and will return to the United Kingdom for rehabilitation. No timetable is set for his return and as a result, the IWGP World Heavyweight title is now vacant.
An announcement on what comes next for the IWGP World Heavyweight title will be made at a later date. Ospreay had held the IWGP World Heavyweight title for 46 days, defeating Kota Ibushi at Sakura Genesis on April 4th.
Ospreay defeated Shingo Takagi on the second night of Wrestling Dontaku on May 4th to retain the title. He was scheduled to defend against Kazuchika Okada at May 29th’s Wrestle Grand Slam at the Tokyo Dome. However, that and the other stadium show set for Yokohama were delayed due to Japan extending their COVID-19 state of emergency through the end of May.
NJPW has not run any shows since May 4th due to nine wrestlers testing positive for COVID-19. They plan to resume shows on May 22nd.
NJPW has revealed the full lineup for this week’s Road to Collision episode of Strong.
On the heels of last week’s elimination match main event, Team Filthy’s JR Kratos and Danny Limelight will take on Karl Fredericks and Brody King.
Fredericks and Limelight were eliminated by Kratos and Limelight in last week’s main event. Team Filthy won that match, then kicked Chris Dickinson out of their group.
Dickinson will face Team Filthy leader and NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor in the main event of next week’s NJPW Strong.
In this week’s opener, Alex Coughlin will take on Bateman.
Friday’s main event was announced previously, as Fred Rosser will take on Hikuleo in a no disqualification match.
Strong airs Fridays at 10 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World and is available on demand shortly after airing.
Here is Friday’s lineup:
No DQ match: Fred Rosser vs. Hikuleo
Karl Fredericks & Brody King vs. JR Kratos & Danny Limelight