NJPW BOSJ 28 night two results: El Desperado vs. Ishimori

The 28th NJPW Best of the Super Juniors tournament continued today in Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. 

IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion El Desperado took on Taiji Ishimori in the main event, while Hiromu Takahashi faced SHO in the semi-main. 

The other tournament action was comprised of El Phantasmo vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru, Robbie Eagles vs. Master Wato , Ryusuke Taguchi vs. BUSHI, plus DOUKI vs. YOH

Ryohei Oiwa and Kosei Fujita faced off in the non-tournament opener. 

Here are today’s results: 

Ryohei Oiwa & Kosei Fujita went to a time limit draw (10:00)

Best of the Super Juniors: DOUKI defeated YOH (10:56)

DOUKI got the upset win by pinfall with Suplex De La Luna.

Best of the Super Juniors: BUSHI defeated Ryusuke Taguchi (13:59)

BUSHI won by pinfall with an MX.

Best of the Super Juniors: Robbie Eagles defeated Master Wato (13:30)

Eagles scored a flash pin with a cradle.

Best of the Super Juniors: Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated El Phantasmo (12:40)

Kanemaru won by pinfall with a rollup.

Best of the Super Juniors: SHO defeated Hiromu Takahashi (17:37)

SHO won by referee stoppage after a triangle. 

Best of the Super Juniors: Taiji Ishimori defeated El Desperado (22:41)

Ishimori won by submission with the Bone Lock.

NJPW BOSJ 28 night one results: El Desperado vs. SHO

The 28th NJPW Best of the Super Juniors tournament began today in Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. 

IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion El Desperado took on SHO in the main event, while Hiromu Takahashi faced YOH in the semi-main. 

The other tournament action was comprised of El Phantasmo vs. Master Wato, Robbie Eagles vs. Ryusuke Taguchi, DOUKI vs. BUSHI, plus Yoshinobu Kanemaru vs. Taiji Ishimori. 

Ryohei Oiwa and Yuto Nakashima faced off in the non-tournament opener. 

Here are today’s results: 

Ryohei Oiwa & Yuto Nakashima went to a time limit draw

Best of the Super Juniors: DOUKI defeated BUSHI

DOUKI got the upset win by pinfall with Suplex De La Luna.

Best of the Super Juniors: Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated Taiji Ishimori

Kanemaru stole a countout win using underhanded tactics.

Best of the Super Juniors: Ryusuke Taguchi defeated Robbie Eagles

Taguchi pinned Eagles with Dodon. 

Best of the Super Juniors: Master Wato defeated El Phantasmo

Wato got the upset win with a jackknife cradle.

Best of the Super Juniors: Hiromu Takahashi defeated YOH

Hiromu got a flash cradle for the pin. 

Best of the Super Juniors: SHO defeated El Desperado

SHO won with a Shock Arrow after interference from Yujiro Takahashi and Dick Togo.

**********

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 11 results: Ishimori vs. Tiger Mask

And then there were two. 

The winner of the A Block in the 2019 Best of the Super Juniors will be decided on Friday, with Taiji Ishimori set to face the unbeaten Shingo Takagi. 

Ishimori sealed the deal with a win over Tiger Mask IV today in Aichi. They had a tense, psychologically sound match on what was one of the weaker shows of the tournament so far. 

Dragon Lee and Yoshinobu Kanemaru had a solid main event outing, but with their tournament fate already decided, it lacked something. 

Here are the full results and match recaps from today’s show:

TOMOHIRO ISHII & YOH DEFEATED YOTA TSUJI & REN NARITA

YOH and Narita exchanged holds and escapes. Ishii and Tsuji tagged in and traded shoulder tackles. Ishii scored the first knockdown. YOH and Ishii used a series of tags, working over Tsuji in the red corner. 

Tsuji hit a back body drop and managed a tag to Narita. Narita hit a pair of tackles and a vertical suplex. He tried for a belly-to-belly, but YOH blocked it. Narita used his crab with a sharpshooter grip, but YOH rolled to the ropes. 

YOH hit a flying forearm. Ishii made a tag and ate a dropkick from Narita. Tsuji tagged in and traded strikes with Ishii. Tsuji scored a shoulder tackle knockdown. He hit a dropkick, but Ishii no-sold it. Ishii applied a full crab, but Tsuji made it to the bottom rope. 

Tsuji and Narita doubled up on Ishii, and Tsuji hit a spear for a near fall. YOH jumped in to even the odds. Ishii hit a back suplex for a near fall, then used a crab on Tsuji for the submission. A solid opener. 

RYUSUKE TAGUCHI, BANDIDO, JUICE ROBINSON & YUYA UEMURA DEFEATED EL PHANTASMO, ROBBIE EAGLES, GEDO & JADO 

Bandido and Eagles started off with some crowd work. They did a series of flips, counters, and reversals. It started off a little clunky, but it was very crisp by the end. Jado and Uemura tagged in, and the pace slowed to a crawl. Jado has balance issues and really shouldn’t be in the ring. 

Bullet Club worked Uemura over in the blue corner. Taguchi got a tag and ran wild with hip attacks. ELP avoided Three Amigos, then hit an enzuigiri. Both tagged out. 

Juice avoided a kendo stick shot from Jado and a brass knuckles shot from Gedo. Juice hit Gedo with Pulp Friction for the pin. Not much to this one. 

TAICHI & DOUKI DEFEATED WILL OSPREAY & SHOTA UMINO

Suzuki-gun attacked before the opening bell. They used the jumpstart and a ringside brawl to take the early advantage. They worked over Umino. Ospreay tagged in, and he went one-on-one with DOUKI. Ospreay gave DOUKI the bulk of the offense. 

Taichi and Umino tagged back in. Taichi used an Axe Bomber for a near fall, then won after a superkick. 

After the match, DOUKI and Taichi beat down Ospreay. Taichi hit him with his microphone stand, and DOUKI used a pipe to attack Ospreay’s ribs. This was the weakest match on the show to this point. 

TETSUYA NAITO & BUSHI DEFEATED ROCKY ROMERO & TOA HENARE

Rocky and BUSHI kicked things off. BUSHI teased a dive, but Rocky cut him off, hitting a dropkick. Henare made a tag and started to work on BUSHI. Naito jumped in illegally to even the odds and turn the tide in BUSHI’s favor. 

Naito tagged in and landed a one-legged dropkick. BUSHI and Naito made quick tags, working over Henare. BUSHI hit a missile dropkick and choked Henare with his T-shirt. Henare hit a big boot and tagged Rocky. 

Rocky hit a dropkick on BUSHI and a rana on an interfering Naito. Rocky hit forever clotheslines and a rewind kick, getting a near fall. Rocky got a cross armbreaker applied, but BUSHI reached the bottom rope. BUSHI hit an enzuigiri, and both tagged out. 

Henare landed a Samoan Drop for a nearfall. Naito hit a hip toss, a dropkick, a neckbreaker, and a second dropkick. All four men jumped in. BUSHI sent Rocky to the apron, then hit a codebreaker. Naito hit Henare with Destino and got the pin. Just a basic undercard tag match. 

A BLOCK MATCH: MARTY SCURLL DEFEATED TAKA MICHINOKU BY FORFEIT

A BLOCK MATCH: SHO DEFEATED TITAN

Titan had his right knee taped up. That played into the story of the match. Titan would tease a flying move, hesitate, then SHO would hit him with a power strike. SHO went to work on the right arm. Titan landed a tope con hilo. The arena was deathly quiet. 

Back in the ring, Titan hit a springboard crossbody, then used a kneebar. SHO reached the bottom rope, forcing a break. SHO blocked a flying headscissors, then hit a powerbomb. They traded strikes. 

They exchanged corner clotheslines. Titan hit a slingshot dropkick in the corner. SHO countered with a pair of lariats. Titan used a victory roll for a near fall. He applied an armbar, but SHO managed to get to the ropes. 

SHO hit a piledriver for a near fall, then used Shock Arrow for the pin. Decent work, but the crowd wasn’t into this at all.

A BLOCK MATCH: TAIJI ISHIMORI DEFEATED TIGER MASK

Ishimori attacked before the bell, but Tiger Mask was able to counter with a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. Tiger hit a double underhook knee strike, then landed a kick for a near fall. Tiger hit a Tiger Driver for a near fall, then transitioned to a cross armbreaker. Tiger then slipped to an armbar, but Ishimori reached the ropes. 

Tiger hit a series of kicks to Ishimori’s arms. Ishimori countered with a jumping knee strike and hit double knees in the corner for a near fall. Tiger used a crucifix for a one count, then blocked a handspring kick. Ishimori hit a running knee for a near fall. 

Ishimori used a Yes Lock, and Tiger tapped out. The psychology of this match was excellent. Ishimori needed a win to stay alive, and Tiger knew that, and threw everything he had at him. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHINGO TAKAGI DEFEATED JONATHAN GRESHAM

Gresham was selling his ribs as he entered. They locked up, but Shingo had no desire to trade holds. He used some strikes, a shoulder tackle, and clotheslined Gresham over the top to the floor. Shingo dropped Gresham on the apron. Gresham avoided a chop and made it back inside. 

Shingo climbed to the apron, but Gresham dropkicked him to the floor. He went out after him, but Shingo dropped the injured ribs on the apron, then hit a knee drop to the ribs. 

Back inside, Shingo hit a vertical suplex for a near fall. Gresham managed to pull back on Shingo’s left leg, then hit a dropkick in the corner. Shingo rolled to the floor, no-sold a knee strike, and hit a jab. 

Back inside, Gresham hit a dropkick, sending Shingo back to the floor. Gresham hit a suicide dive, then used a rear naked choke on the floor. They teased a countout, but Shingo made it back in at 19. 

Gresham hit a Shooting Star Press, but he could not follow up. Gresham hit a series of hard strikes and got a couple of quick near falls. Gresham tried for the octopus, but Shingo blocked it. Gresham hit the ropes, but Shingo hit him with a pop-up DVD. 

Shingo hit Noshigami for a near fall, then a Pumping Bomber for another two count. Shingo went for Last of the Dragon, but Gresham blocked it and used a bridge for a near fall. Gresham got the Octopus, but Shingo reversed into Last of the Dragon for the pin. A very good match. 

A BLOCK MATCH: DRAGON LEE DEFEATED YOSHINOBU KANEMARU

Kanemaru attacked before the bell. Dragon countered. He went for a tope con hilo, but changed his mind and used a handstand to flip off the apron. Kanemaru used a strike, then choked Dragon with a chair. 

Back in the ring, Kanemaru went for Dragon’s mask. He tied Dragon to the tree of woe and landed a dropkick. Kanemaru hit a backdrop and used a full crab, but Dragon reached the ropes. Kanemaru used a vertical suplex for a near fall, then sent Dragon back outside. 

Kanemaru hit a snap suplex on the concrete floor in the aisle. Kanemaru shoved a Young Lion in Dragon’s way as he tried to get back inside, but Dragon made it in at 18. Dragon hit a dropkick, then a tope con hilo. 

Back inside, Dragon hit a rolling dropkick, then a backbreaker. He hit a one-legged dropkick for a one count, then a dropkick in the corner. He teased a second dropkick in the corner, but Kanemaru cut him off with his own dropkick. 

Dragon hit a snap German, a jumping knee strike, and a DDT. They rolled to the apron, where Kanemaru hit an inverted DDT. Back inside, Kanemaru went for Deep Impact. Dragon caught him coming in with a jumping knee. 

Dragon went for Desnucadora. Kanemaru grabbed Red Shoes, and Taichi jumped in from the commentary table and pulled Red Shoes to the floor. Kanemaru ripped off Dragon’s mask. Kanemaru tried to spit whiskey, but Dragon hit a dropkick. 

Shota Umino gave Dragon his mask back. Kanemaru hit a low blow, and a moonsault for a near fall, as Red Shoes was revived. Dragon hit Desnucadora, but could not follow up with a cover. 

They traded roll-ups for near falls. Dragon pulled down a kneepad and hit a running knee strike. He followed with Desnucadora for the pin. Another solid match, but this was one of the weaker shows of the tournament. 

A BLOCK STANDINGS

  • Shingo Takagi: 16
  • Taiji Ishimori: 14
  • Dragon Lee: 12 (Out of contention)
  • Marty Scurll: 10 (Out of contention)
  • Jonathan Gresham: 8 (Out of contention)
  • SHO: 8 (Out of contention)
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Tiger Mask: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Titan: 4 (Out of contention)
  • TAKA Michinoku: 0 (Out of contention)

B BLOCK STANDINGS

  • El Phantasmo: 10 (Holds tiebreaker over Eagles, Ospreay)
  • Robbie Eagles: 10 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, Taguchi)
  • Will Ospreay: 10 
  • Ryusuke Taguchi: 10 
  • BUSHI: 8 (Out of contention)
  • YOH: 8 (Out of contention)
  • Bandido: 6 (Out of contention)
  • Rocky Romero: 6 (Out of contention)
  • DOUKI: 2 (Out of contention)
  • Ren Narita: 0 (Out of contention)

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 10 results: Ospreay vs. Eagles

The 2019 Best of the Super Juniors finals picture became much clearer after Sunday’s show in Chiba.

With four shows and two tournament matches remaining for each wrestler before the finals, the field of 20 has been narrowed to six possible winners. 

In the A Block, only Shingo Takagi and Taiji Ishimori have a chance to go to the final. They will meet on Friday, May 31. If Ishimori wins his match against Tiger Mask IV on Wednesday, the match on the 31st will decide the A Block winner. 

The B Block is more complicated.

El Phantasmo is in the driver’s seat, by virtue of his wins over Will Ospreay and Robbie Eagles. 

ELP has yet to face Ryusuke Taguchi, who still has an outside chance to win the block, along with Ospreay. 

Eagles holds a tiebreaker over Ospreay and Taguchi, but his loss to ELP looms large. 

Neither Ospreay nor Taguchi currently has a tiebreaker advantage. 

Got it? 

Here are full results and match recaps from Sunday’s show:

B BLOCK MATCH: RYUSUKE TAGUCHI DEFEATED REN NARITA

They kicked off the show with a lengthy mat wrestling sequence. Narita got some takedowns and worked on Taguchi’s right leg. Taguchi tried for an ankle lock, but Narita reached the ropes. Taguchi sent Narita outside with a hip attack. He teased a dive, but Narita cut him off with a dropkick to the left leg. 

Narita tried for a cloverleaf, but Taguchi got the ankle lock. Narita slipped out. Taguchi went for Dodon, but Narita escaped and applied a full crab. Taguchi rolled through the crab, then got the ankle lock. Narita used an inside cradle for a near fall. 

Taguchi used the threat of a magistral cradle to work his way back to the ankle lock, and Narita tapped out. This lacked sizzle, but it was a technically sound opener. 

– They announced that Dragon Lee won his scheduled match over TAKA Michinoku by forfeit. TAKA has a leg injury, and could not compete. 

A BLOCK MATCH: JONATHAN GRESHAM DEFEATED YOSHINOBU KANEMARU

Kanemaru scored an early takedown, but Gresham excels on the mat and used a series of headscissors to maintain the advantage. Kanemaru hit a dropkick to the head from the floor, while Gresham was draped over the edge of the apron. Kanemaru then used a headscissors on the mat. 

They exchanged strikes. Gresham came back with an arm drag, but Kanemaru hit a DDT. Kanemaru hit a top rope moonsault for a two count. Gresham hit a rana, but Kanemaru rolled through into an attempted pinfall. They traded rolling cradles for a series of near falls. 

Gresham hit a bridging German for a two count. Kanemaru threw the referee into Gresham and grabbed his whiskey bottle. Gresham ducked a swing with the bottle, then locked on the octopus. Kanemaru tapped out. 

B BLOCK MATCH: ROCKY ROMERO DEFEATED DOUKI

DOUKI attacked Rocky as he posed on the ropes before the bell. DOUKI posted Rocky’s knee. DOUKI continued to go after the left leg. Rocky hit an enzuigiri with the right leg, but could not follow up. DOUKI worked on the left leg, then hit a double stomp. 

DOUKI untied a corner pad, exposing the buckles. Rocky avoided the buckle and sent DOUKI shoulder-first into the post. Rocky fired up and hit a series of palm strikes. He landed a springboard rana, then hit forever clotheslines. They collided on a criss-cross spot, into a double down. 

Rocky blocked a springboard DDT attempt. He hit a tornado DDT, into a falcon arrow, into a cross armbreaker. DOUKI stood up out of the hold and got a near fall. DOUKI used a kneebar, but Rocky rolled to the ropes. 

They traded quick near falls, then exchanged strikes. Rocky used a kimura, then rolled through into a cross armbreaker, and DOUKI tapped out. This was probably DOUKI’s best match in NJPW so far. 

A BLOCK MATCH: MARTY SCURLL DEFEATED TITAN

Titan used a series of headscissors on the mat, then bridged out of them, which was impressive as hell. Scurll rolled outside, and Titan landed on his feet on a dive to the floor. He followed with a flying headscissors on the floor. 

Back inside, Scurll used a Romero Special. He went for Titan’s mask, then went after his legs. Titan hit a clothesline in the corner and flew outside. Brody King threatened to interfere, but Titan took him out with a dive. He followed with a springboard attack back into the ring, then hit a top rope rana for a two count. 

Scurll used an eye poke, then hit a tornado DDT. Titan countered with a wheel kick, into a double down. They exchanged strikes. Scurll hit a half-and-half suplex, but Titan no-sold it. Titan used an inverted figure four, but Scurll made it to the ropes. 

Scurll hit a pair of lariats, then used a package DDT for a near fall. He followed with Black Plague and got the pin. Another solid match. Scurll gave Titan a ton of offense. 

B BLOCK MATCH: BUSHI DEFEATED BANDIDO

BUSHI offered a handshake. Bandido hesitated, and BUSHI kicked him. They did a series of flying counters and reversals. Bandido hit a jumping knee. BUSHI countered by sending Bandido to the floor, then hitting a pescado into a rana on the floor. 

Back inside, BUSHI used an STF, but Bandido made the ropes. BUSHI tried for a DDT on the apron, but Bandido escaped, sent BUSHI to the floor, then hit a gigantic tope con hilo. Back inside, Bandido hit a press slam for a near fall. 

They traded enzuigiris. Bandido hit a tornillo off the top, an inverted suplex, and a shining wizard, picking up a near fall. BUSHI escaped a 21 Plex and hit a dropkick. He followed up with a DDT on the apron, then hit a neckbreaker for a near fall. 

BUSHI teased a codebreaker, but Bandido blocked it. BUSHI hit a Canadian Destroyer, then hit an MX for the pin. Good stuff, and it could have been even better if they had more time. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHINGO TAKAGI DEFEATED TIGER MASK IV

Tiger used a side headlock, but Shingo pushed off, into a shoulder tackle. Tiger dropped to the mat and lured Shingo in. Tiger tried for an armbar, but Shingo rolled to the floor. Tiger targeted Shingo’s right arm with kicks, and Shingo again rolled outside. 

Shingo pulled Tiger into the post and posted both of his legs. Shingo hit a vertical suplex for a two count. Shingo hit a dragon screw. He went for a figure four, but Tiger kicked him off. He followed with a series of kicks to the neck for a near fall of his own. 

Tiger got double underhooks, looking for the Tiger Driver. Shingo backdropped out, then hit a slam. They fought on the top rope, and Tiger hit a double underhook superplex. Shingo blocked a Tiger Suplex attempt, then they exchanged strikes. 

Tiger hit a Tiger Driver for a near fall. He locked on an armbar, then slipped to a triangle, but Shingo powered out. Tiger blocked a Pumping Bomber, but Shingo hit a DVD. Tiger avoided another Pumping Bomber and used a crucifix for a near fall. 

Tiger used an armbar, but Shingo reached the ropes. Tiger hit the ropes, right into a Pumping Bomber. Tiger kicked out at one. Shingo hit a second Pumping Bomber, but Tiger kicked out at two. Shingo hit Last of the Dragon, and got the pin. 

I don’t think that anyone bought that Tiger had a chance, but they had a good match, and the last couple of near falls were great. 

B BLOCK MATCH: YOH DEFEATED EL PHANTASMO

ELP attacked before the bell. He hit a suplex on the floor, then sent YOH into the crowd, wiping out several rows of chairs. They teased a countout, but YOH made it back in at 19. YOH used a quick roll-up for a near fall, then a backslide for another. 

YOH went after ELP’s left arm, which was heavily taped. ELP clotheslined YOH on the top rope, then hit a quebrada for a near fall. ELP made another cover and used the ropes for leverage. Red Shoes refused to count the pin. 

ELP used a choke, then hit a chop. ELP tied YOH to the tree of woe and stomped on his groin. YOH hit a spider German and followed up with a flying forearm. YOH hit a bridging belly-to-belly with a high grip for a two count. 

ELP hit a top rope rana. He went for a frog splash, but YOH got his knees up. YOH used a cradle for a near fall, then got an armbar, but ELP reached the ropes. They traded cradles, with both scoring a near fall. 

ELP hit a superkick, then used an airplane spin for a near fall. ELP tried for CR2, but YOH sent him to the floor. YOH teased a dive, but ELP cut him off with a kick. ELP sent YOH into Red Shoes, who took a bump. 

ELP grabbed his belt, but Red Shoes woke up and took it away. YOH used an O’Connor roll for the upset. Good action, but it felt like the crowd wasn’t into it. 

B BLOCK MATCH: ROBBIE EAGLES DEFEATED WILL OSPREAY 

They locked up. Ospreay pushed Eagles to the ropes, then broke cleanly. They locked up again, then broke cleanly again. They engaged in a knuckle lock. Eagles covered, but Ospreay bridged. Ospreay monkey flipped out, then hit a dropkick to the knees. 

Eagles offered a handshake. Ospreay went to accept it, but Eagles slapped him. Ospreay used a monkey flip to send Eagles outside, then hit a handspring into a pose. He followed with a plancha. 

Back in the ring, they exchanged chops. Eagles hit an arm drag and a flying headscissors. Eagles hit a running knee for a near fall. Ospreay rolled to the ropes, and Eagles went after his left leg. They traded chops. Ospreay hit a handspring kick. 

Ospreay hit a 619. He teased Pip Pip Cheerio, but Eagles escaped. Ospreay hit a dropkick in the corner, then used a standing Shooting Star Press for a two count. Ospreay then hit Pip Pip Cheerio, scoring a two count.

Eagles rolled outside, and Ospreay hit a Space Flying Tiger Drop. Back inside, Eagles recovered and hit a low dropkick, followed by a strike to the neck. Eagles sent Ospreay outside, then hit a flip dive through the ropes to the floor. 

Back in the ring, Eagles used double knees in the corner, a 619 to the legs, and another double knees. Eagles hit a kneebreaker. He hit another, but Ospreay countered with an enzuigiri. They did an intricate series of reversals, ending with Eagles dumping Ospreay on his head with a poison rana. 

From their knees, they exchanged forearm shots. Both men got to their feet, and they continued to trade. Eagles broke the exchange with a low dropkick, then hit a series of short kicks. Ospreay hit an enzuigiri. Eagles went for Turbo Backpack, but Ospreay escaped. Eagles hit a crossbody as Ospreay was up against the ropes, and they spilled to the floor. 

They exchanged strikes on the apron. Ospreay tried for a Storm Breaker, but Eagles countered with a Sliced Bread on the apron. Eagles made it back inside. They teased a countout on Ospreay, but he made it back in at 19. 

Eagles hit a dragon rana for a near fall. He missed a 450 as Ospreay rolled out of the way. Ospreay hit a hook kick. He teased the Hidden Blade, but Eagles dropped to the mat to avoid it. 

ELP came to ringside, distracting Ospreay. Eagles applied the Miller Special. Ospreay teased tapping out, but finally reached the bottom rope. Eagles hit a dragon screw. He tried for a springboard move, but Ospreay dropkicked him out of the sky.

Eagles went for a reverse rana off the top, but Ospreay landed on his feet. Eagles got the Miller Special locked on, but Ospreay reversed into a cradle for a near fall. Eagles hit Turbo Backpack, but Ospreay kicked out at the 25-minute mark. 

Ospreay hit a buckle bomb, then followed up with a sit-out powerbomb for a near fall. ELP jumped on the apron, distracting Ospreay as he went to the top rope. Ospreay hit a 450, but Eagles got his knees up. Red Shoes took a bump. 

Ospreay used a standing Spanish Fly. He got a visual pinfall, but with Red Shoes out, ELP hit Ospreay with a chair. Eagles hit a 450, then used the Miller Special for the submission at 28 minutes. 

ELP tried to celebrate with Eagles after the match, but Eagles wanted nothing to do with him, teasing dissension in Bullet Club. 

If you know the story of Ospreay and Eagles, and how Ospreay got Eagles into NJPW, then this probably meant more to you than if you were watching without that backstory. If you watched the last match these two had in Australia, even more so. 

A BLOCK MATCH: TAIJI ISHIMORI DEFEATED SHO

SHO missed a dropkick out of the opening sequence. He quickly recovered, sending Ishimori to the apron. SHO connected with a dropkick, sending Ishimori to the floor. Back inside, Ishimori established the early advantage, stomping away at SHO’s arms. 

Ishimori cranked on SHO’s neck. SHO fired back with shots to Ishimori’s neck. Ishimori went for a handspring kick, but SHO caught him. Ishimori blocked a suplex attempt, but SHO hit a spear. SHO landed a vertical suplex for a near fall. He fought for a cross armbreaker, but Ishimori rolled to the ropes. 

Ishimori rolled through another suplex attempt, landing a double stomp. Ishimori missed with double knees in the corner, but connected on a handspring kick. SHO rolled outside, and Ishimori hit a golden triangle. 

Back inside, SHO hit an inverted suplex, dropping Ishimori on his knees. SHO hit two rolling Germans, then bridged on the third into a near fall. SHO blocked a knee strike, and Ishimori jumped over a spear attempt. SHO hit a clothesline, into a double down. 

They had a long striking exchange. They traded jumping knees. SHO landed a pair of lariats, then hit a backbreaker across his knees. He hit a second, but Ishimori kicked out. 

SHO went for Shock Arrow. Ishimori powered out, but SHO eventually landed a piledriver. SHO used a sunset flip for a two count. He tried for a cross armbreaker, but Ishimori transitioned to the Yes Lock. After a long battle, SHO made the ropes. 

Ishimori hit a Woo dropkick, then followed up with double knees in the corner. Ishimori hit a lungblower, but SHO kicked out at two. 

SHO blocked a Bloody Cross and hit a knee strike. SHO went for Shock Arrow, but Ishimori countered into the Bloody Cross for the pin. Not a bad match by any means, but they couldn’t follow Ospreay and Eagles. 

A BLOCK STANDINGS

  • Shingo Takagi: 14
  • Taiji Ishimori: 12
  • Dragon Lee: 10 (Out of contention)
  • Marty Scurll: 8 (Out of contention)
  • Jonathan Gresham: 8 (Out of contention)
  • SHO: 6 (Out of contention)
  • Titan: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Tiger Mask: 4 (Out of contention)
  • TAKA Michinoku: 0 (Out of contention)

B BLOCK STANDINGS

  • El Phantasmo: 10 (Holds tiebreaker over Eagles, Ospreay)
  • Robbie Eagles: 10 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, Taguchi)
  • Will Ospreay: 10 
  • Ryusuke Taguchi: 10 
  • BUSHI: 8 (Out of contention)
  • YOH: 8 (Out of contention)
  • Bandido: 6 (Out of contention)
  • Rocky Romero: 6 (Out of contention)
  • DOUKI: 2 (Out of contention)
  • Ren Narita: 0 (Out of contention)

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night nine results: Romero vs. ELP

Rocky Romero’s first singles main event in Korakuen Hall was a memorable one. 

Romero defeated El Phantasmo in a fantastic main event, which nearly went to the 30-minute time limit. 

ELP took his first loss of the Best of the Super Juniors, but remains atop the B Block, by virtue of his win over Will Ospreay. Shingo Takagi remains undefeated atop the A Block. 

Here are full results and match recaps from Friday’s show:

A BLOCK MATCH: SHO DEFEATED TIGER MASK IV

They started the show with a grappling battle. SHO pulled guard, while Tiger tried to throw some shots from top position. Tiger hit a series of kicks to SHO’s arms. SHO came back with a spear, then used a cross armbreaker. Tiger rolled to the ropes for a break. 

SHO went for a powerbomb, but Tiger slipped out and hit a couple of jumping knee strikes. Tiger hit a knee strike, then hit a Tiger Bomb for a near fall. Tiger tried for a Tiger Suplex, but SHO turned it into a Shock Arrow. SHO could not capitalize. 

Tiger used a crucifix for a near fall. SHO hit a lariat, then a powerbomb on the knees for a near fall. SHO hit a second Shock Arrow to get the pin. Solid opener.

B BLOCK MATCH: WILL OSPREAY DEFEATED REN NARITA

Narita hit an arm drag and a shoulder tackle. Ospreay came back with a 619 and a knee drop. Ospreay hit a handspring, but bounced right into a German from Narita. Narita used a vertical suplex for a two count. 

Ospreay hit a dropkick in the corner, then a standing Shooting Star Press for a near fall. Ospreay hit Pip Pip Cheerio, and Narita rolled to the floor. Ospreay teased a plancha, but Narita stepped out of the way. Ospreay landed on his feet, and Narita hit a belly-to-belly on the floor. They teased a countout, but Ospreay made it back in at 19. 

Ospreay hit a Robinson Special. He went for an OsCutter, but Narita caught him coming in. Narita used a modified cloverleaf. Ospreay teased tapping out, but made the bottom rope for a break. Narita tried for another belly-to-belly, but Ospreay landed on his feet. 

Ospreay went for a Storm Breaker, but Narita turned it into a backslide for an awesome near fall. Ospreay popped up, hit an OsCutter, and got the pin. This was tremendous. 

A BLOCK MATCH: MARTY SCURLL DEFEATED YOSHINOBU KANEMARU

This was a lot of fun. They had an intense comedy brawl. 

They started with some ha ha. Scurll swung his umbrella, while Kanemaru threatened to attack with his whiskey bottle. They had a long crowd brawl. They teased a double countout, but both made it back in at 19. 

Back inside, the ref took a bump. Kanemaru used a tornado DDT and had a visual pinfall. Kanemaru spit whiskey, but Scurll used his umbrella to block it. 

Kanemaru grabbed the umbrella, and Scurll grabbed the whiskey. Scurll spit whiskey in Kanemaru’s face for a near fall. Scurll then hit Black Plague for the pin. 

B BLOCK MATCH: ROBBIE EAGLES DEFEATED DOUKI

The Robbie Eagles entrance song is an absolute banger. 

Eagles hit a series of knee strikes. DOUKI avoided a charge by doing the splits, and Eagles fell outside. DOUKI posted Eagles, then hit him with a chair. The chair caught Eagles on the top of his head and split him open. 

Eagles was bleeding profusely. They continued with the match, but the nasty cut was the only thing I could focus on. DOUKI went for his modified triangle, but Eagles reversed it into a Miller Special. DOUKI rolled to the ropes. 

DOUKI hit a springboard DDT for a near fall. DOUKI used a series of cradles for near falls. Eagles hit an enzuigiri. DOUKI hit a lariat. Eagles blocked a Suplex de la Luna and hit a Turbo Backpack for a near fall. 

Eagles hit a 450, then used the Miller Special for the submission. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHINGO TAKAGI DEFEATED TAKA MICHINOKU

TAKA used an eye poke, followed by a headscissors. Shingo rolled outside, and TAKA posted him. Shingo clotheslined the post. TAKA used a figure four around the post. TAKA hit a thrust kick on the apron and followed with a moonsault off the post to the floor. Turn back the clock night for TAKA. 

TAKA took the fight into the crowd and used a Just Facelock. Shingo beat the count back inside. TAKA used a roll-up and a magistral cradle for a pair of near falls. TAKA hit a knee strike for a two count, then went back to the Just Facelock. Shingo rolled to the ropes. 

TAKA hit another knee, and again used the Just Facelock. Shingo again reached the ropes. Shingo recovered and got his first meaningful offense of the match. He hit a pair of short lariats, then followed with a Pumping Bomber. 

TAKA went for a cradle, but Shingo blocked it and hit Last of the Dragon for the win. This was an awesome sprint. TAKA had his best performance in years, and Shingo has been built up perfectly since his NJPW debut. 

B BLOCK MATCH: BANDIDO DEFEATED RYUSUKE TAGUCHI

Bandido can do it all, including Taguchi comedy matches. They started off with some rope-running comedy before settling down into a more serious confrontation. 

Bandido hit a sunset flip to the floor, then powerbombed Taguchi into the post. Bandido hit a suicide dive into the fourth row. Back inside, Bandido hit a springboard high cross, followed by a dropkick to the back. 

Taguchi tried for a pair of hip attacks, but Bandido blocked both with atomic drops. Taguchi connected with a crossbody to the floor, a hip attack, and a tope con hilo. Taguchi hit Three Amigos for a near fall. 

Bandido hit an inverted suplex and a hip attack of his own. He went for another, but Taguchi caught him in an ankle lock. They traded a series of victory rolls for near falls. Taguchi went for a hip attack off the second rope, but Bandido caught him. Bandido hit a bridging suplex for a two count. 

Bandido teased the 21 Plex, but Taguchi cut him off. Bandido hit a GTS, then hit a 21 Plex for the pin. 

A BLOCK MATCH: TAIJI ISHIMORI DEFEATED JONATHAN GRESHAM

They spit on each other. Gresham took a chest-first turnbuckle, and Ishimori hit a sliding German. Gresham hit a flying headscissors, and Ishimori rolled outside. Gresham hit a knee strike off the apron to the floor. 

Back inside, Gresham hit a high cross off the top. Ishimori hit a handspring kick. Gresham used a poison rana into a pinning combination for a near fall. Ishimori escaped a bridging clutch and used a Yes Lock, but Gresham reached the ropes. 

Gresham used an octopus hold, but Ishimori broke it, then hit a shotgun dropkick. Ishimori hit double knees in the corner for a near fall, then hit a Bloody Cross for the pin. They did a lot of good stuff, but they didn’t get a lot of time. 

B BLOCK MATCH: BUSHI DEFEATED YOH

BUSHI hit a dropkick before the opening bell and followed with a suicide dive. BUSHI used his belt to whip YOH on the floor. Back inside, BUSHI used an STF. YOH reached the ropes, but BUSHI raked his eyes on the break. 

They exchanged chops. YOH missed a dropkick, but connected on a flying forearm. YOH hit a second dropkick, then a third to the legs. BUSHI hit his own dropkick, then teased a DDT on the apron. YOH hit a dropkick, and BUSHI rolled to the floor. YOH connected with a tope con hilo.

YOH hit a missile dropkick to the right knee, then used a Calf Crusher. After a struggle, BUSHI reached the ropes. YOH hit a superplex into a falcon arrow for a near fall. YOH hit a bridging suplex for another two count. 

YOH tried for a dragon suplex, but BUSHI reversed into a swinging neckbreaker. They traded slaps to the face. BUSHI hit a rewind kick, then hit two codebreakers. BUSHI hit a Canadian Destroyer for a near fall, then hit an MX for the pin. 

This was a good action match, but BUSHI’s selling was a little underwhelming and hurt the match. 

A BLOCK MATCH: DRAGON LEE DEFEATED TITAN

Dragon gave Red Shoes a mask to wear, and he refereed the opening sequence while wearing it. Awesome. 

They started with an awesome lucha sequence, ending in a stalemate. Dragon sent Titan to the floor, then hit a tope con hilo. Dragon hit a chop. Titan followed with a running clothesline in the corner and a slingshot dropkick. 

Dragon hit a delayed dropkick in the corner, and Titan hit a dropkick to the legs. Titan hit a rana off the apron to the floor, then followed with an Asai moonsault. Back inside, Titan came off the top rope into a jumping knee strike from Dragon. 

Titan hit a dragon screw, then used a figure four. They sat on the top rope, trading strikes. Titan teased hitting a double stomp, but Dragon threw him off. Titan hit a backflip kick. He tried for a top rope rana, but Dragon cut him off and hit a double stomp. 

Dragon teased Desnucadora, but Titan reversed it into a tornado DDT. Dragon hit a knee strike. Titan hit a Canadian Destroyer, but Dragon no-sold and hit another knee. Dragon went for Desnucadora again, but Titan reversed into a falcon arrow. 

Dragon hit a brainbuster for a near fall. He followed with a knee strike, a poison rana, and another knee. Dragon pulled down his knee pad and hit another knee, then followed with Desnucadora for the pin. Awesome match. 

B BLOCK MATCH: ROCKY ROMERO DEFEATED EL PHANTASMO 

Phantasmo ripped off Rocky’s entrance hat and threw it into the crowd. Rocky hit a dropkick, and Phantasmo rolled outside. Rocky hit a suicide dive. Phantasmo recovered quickly and landed a series of chops. They continued to fight on the floor, then into the crowd. 

After a lengthy crowd brawl, Rocky hit a knee strike inside. Phantasmo came back with a quebrada, then hit a series of strikes. Rocky came back with strikes, but Phantasmo hit a dropkick to the knee. 

The pace slowed significantly as Phantasmo landed some chops. Rocky tried for forever clotheslines, but Phantasmo tied him to the tree of woe and stomped on his groin. Phantasmo did his rope walk. Rocky pushed him off the ropes to the floor, then hit a pescado. 

Rocky posted Phantasmo’s left arm. He tried for a knee strike, but posted himself. Phantasmo crotched Rocky on the post. Phantasmo ripped up some of the ringside padding. He teased a CR2 on the floor, but Rocky hit a backdrop. He followed up by using Phantasmo as a lawn dart, sending him into the post. 

Rocky hit a flip dive off the post to the floor. Back in the ring, Rocky hit a series of kicks to the left arm. He hit a double stomp to the back as Phantasmo was draped across the ropes. Phantasmo teased a BME, but Rocky crotched him on the top, then tied him to the tree of woe. Rocky stomped on Phantasmo’s groin. 

Rocky hit a tornado DDT, into a falcon arrow, into a cross armbreaker. Phantasmo transitioned to an ankle lock, but Rocky slipped to a triangle. Phantasmo hit a powerbomb, breaking the hold. 

Phantasmo hit an enzuigiri. Rocky hit a rewind kick. Rocky went for Sliced Bread, but Phantasmo cut him off. After a fight, Rocky was able to land Sliced Bread for a near fall. Rocky tried for an armbreaker, but Phantasmo rolled to the ropes for a break. 

Rocky hit a couple of forever clotheslines in the corner, but Phantasmo cut him off. Rocky tried for a backslide, but Phantasmo hit an airplane spin. He went for a cover, but Rocky rolled to the floor. They teased a countout, but Rocky made it back inside. 

Phantasmo missed a frog splash. They exchanged strikes. Rocky hit a pair of lariats at the 25-minute mark for a near fall. Rocky hit a standing Sliced Bread, but Phantasmo kicked out at one and threw Rocky into Red Shoes. Red Shoes took a bump. 

Phantasmo tried for a low blow, but Rocky caught it and used a cross armbreaker. He gave up the hold, and Phantasmo hit a low blow. Phantasmo used a cradle for a near fall, then landed on Red Shoes, who took another bump. 

Phantasmo grabbed his belt, and he and Rocky did the Eddie Guerrero spot. Red Shoes teased a DQ, but Rocky used a roll-up for a near fall. Phantasmo tried for CR, but Rocky hit a rana for a near fall. 

Rocky got the cross armbreaker — and Phantasmo tapped out. Amazing main event. SHO and YOH came in to celebrate with Rocky after the win. 

A BLOCK STANDINGS

  • Shingo Takagi: 12
  • Taiji Ishimori: 10
  • Dragon Lee: 8
  • Jonathan Gresham: 6
  • SHO: 6
  • Marty Scurll: 6
  • Titan: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru: 4 (Out of contention)
  • Tiger Mask: 4 (Out of contention)
  • TAKA Michinoku: 0 (Out of contention)

B BLOCK STANDINGS

  • El Phantasmo: 10
  • Will Ospreay: 10
  • Robbie Eagles: 8
  • Ryusuke Taguchi: 8
  • Bandido: 6
  • BUSHI: 6
  • YOH: 6
  • Rocky Romero: 4
  • DOUKI: 2 (Out of contention)
  • Ren Narita: 0 (Out of contention)

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night eight results: Ospreay vs. Bandido

Night eight of the Best of the Super Juniors delivered — and then some. 

Three matches on the show are contenders for the best match of the tournament. 

Dragon Lee and Shingo Takagi capped the night with a hard-hitting affair, Will Ospreay and Bandido did their best to steal the show in the semi-main event, and Marty Scurll and SHO tore the house down in their undercard battle. 

Here are the full results and recaps from today’s show in Korakuen Hall:

B BLOCK MATCH: EL PHANTASMO DEFEATED REN NARITA

They did some mat work at the outset, with neither man gaining a clear advantage. The Korakuen crowd was clearly behind Narita. Phantasmo used a series of kicks to take control. He tied Narita to the tree of woe, then stomped on his groin. 

Phantasmo did his rope walk around three quarters of the ring. He bounced off the ropes, right into a belly-to-belly from Narita. Narita followed with a second suplex for a near fall. Phantasmo hit a series of kicks and followed with an enzuigiri. 

Narita used an inside cradle and a backslide for two near falls, and then hit his awesome bridging belly-to-belly for another. Phantasmo hit a kick and went for CR2, but Narita slapped on a full crab. Phantasmo hit a thumb to the eye and used a cradle for a two count. 

Phantasmo hit an airplane spin, then a frog splash for the pin. 

After the bell, Phantasmo hit CR2. Good opener. 

A BLOCK MATCH: TITAN DEFEATED TAKA MICHINOKU

They exchanged arm drags. TAKA hit a PK, and Titan rolled to the floor. He teased a dive, but didn’t deliver. TAKA used an eye poke, then a bow and arrow. Titan rolled outside, and TAKA posted him. 

Back inside, TAKA used a Fujiwara armbar. He hit a step-up knee in the corner, but couldn’t follow up. Titan started to fly, hitting a headscissors and then a tope con hilo. Back inside, TAKA applied the Just Facelock, but Titan made the ropes. 

TAKA missed a moonsault, then used a magistral cradle to set up the Just Facelock again. Titan made the ropes. Titan attempted an O’Connor roll, but TAKA caught him in the Just Facelock a third time. Titan again reached the ropes. 

TAKA went for the Michinoku Driver, but Titan reversed it into a DVD. He covered and got the pin. The ref’s count was weird, as if he was expecting TAKA to kick out, but he didn’t. Strange finish to an okay match. 

B BLOCK MATCH: BUSHI DEFEATED ROBBIE EAGLES

BUSHI hit a missile dropkick before the bell, then landed a suicide dive. BUSHI took off his entrance attire, and used his belt to whip Eagles. Back inside, Eagles hit a chop block and an elbow to the back of the head. 

Eagles focused his attack on BUSHI’s left leg. He used a series of stomps and holds to work over the leg. BUSHI hit a DDT, then used his T-shirt to choke Eagles. BUSHI hit an enzuigiri, followed by another DDT. 

BUSHI teased a DDT on the apron, but Eagles took out his legs, then hit a crazy flip dive through the second rope to the floor. Back in the ring, Eagles continued to go after the left leg. He hit a Turbo Backpack for a near fall, then applied the Rod Miller Special. BUSHI forced a rope break. 

Eagles hit double knees in the corner, twice. He went for a 450, but BUSHI rolled out of the way. BUSHI hit a codebreaker over the middle rope, then hit a neckbreaker for a near fall. BUSHI hit the MX and got the pin. Solid match with a cool dive, but not spectacular. 

A BLOCK MATCH: JONATHAN GRESHAM DEFEATED TIGER MASK IV

They traded holds to a stalemate, then shook hands. Tiger landed some strikes, but Gresham fired back. Tiger hit a series of kicks to the stomach, then used a series of chinlocks. He transitioned to a headscissors, but Gresham rolled to the ropes for the break. 

Tiger landed some more kicks, and Gresham sold them in a big way. The pace had slowed, but they picked it back up with a mat exchange, ending with Gresham hitting a dropkick. Gresham used a cobra twist, but Tiger broke the hold with a kick. 

Tiger used a headscissors and an armbar, but Gresham reached the bottom rope. Tiger hit a double underhook knee strike, then another kick. Both men hit the ropes, and they both hit a crossbody, leading to a double down. 

Tiger was up first and hit a kick. They exchanged strikes. Gresham used a headscissors before trapping Tiger in a cradle for the pin. Good match with a nice finish. 

B BLOCK MATCH: YOH DEFEATED DOUKI

DOUKI hit a dropkick to the back as YOH was posing on the turnbuckle before the bell. He followed with a suicide dive, then took the fight into the crowd. He slammed YOH’s face into the famed East sign in Korakuen. The crowd chanted for DOUKI. 

DOUKI continued his attack in the ring. He hit a double stomp and picked up a near fall. YOH blocked a suplex. He missed a basement dropkick, but successfully hit a dragon screw. YOH hit a flying forearm. He connected with a back elbow and hit a neckbreaker for a near fall. 

YOH hit another dragon screw. YOH rolled into a Calf Crusher, but DOUKI reached the ropes. YOH hit a series of dropkicks to the right leg. DOUKI tried for a slingshot DDT, but YOH turned it into a falcon arrow for a two count. 

DOUKI used a roll-up for a two count, then used a modified triangle. YOH rolled to the ropes, forcing a break. DOUKI hit an ugly-looking slingshot DDT for a two count. YOH hit a bridging German for a near fall. 

YOH hit an enzuigiri, and DOUKI hit a big lariat for a two count. DOUKI went for the Suplex de la Luna, but YOH escaped. YOH hit a superkick, then hit a Dragon Suplex for the pin. 

YOH is awesome. This was very good, but I think it would have worked even better as a sprint, with three or four minutes cut off. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHO DEFEATED MARTY SCURLL

Scurll came out limping. He had his head taped up, with Brody King holding an ice pack on his neck. SHO entered, and Scurll hit SHO with his umbrella, then ripped off the tape on his head. Scurll picked up a quick near fall. 

SHO fired right back with strikes and hit a suplex for his own near fall. Scurll went to the apron and hit a draping neckbreaker over the second rope. Back inside, Scurll hit another neckbreaker for a near fall. Scurll hit a series of chops, then a superkick to the back of the neck. 

Scurll used a headscissors, continuing to work the neck of SHO. Scurll also trapped the left arm, but SHO reached the ropes. Scurll used a slingshot to send SHO’s neck into the bottom rope. Scurll hit his superkick on the apron. SHO fired up, so Scurll hit a second. SHO asked for a third, and he caught the kick. 

They exchanged strikes on the apron. SHO jumped back inside, swept the legs, then sent Scurll to the floor with a dropkick. SHO hit a backstabber, then used a cross armbreaker. Scurll reached the bottom rope. 

SHO hit a kick, then hit two rolling Germans. He went for a third, but Scurll escaped. Scurll hit a half-and-half suplex, but SHO countered with a third German. They exchanged strikes. SHO hit a Lumbar Check for a near fall. 

SHO went for Shock Arrow, but Scurll blocked it and hit a DVD over his knee for a near fall. Scurll hit a tornado DDT. He rolled through into a chicken wing attempt, but SHO countered into Shock Arrow for a near fall. 

SHO went for a powerbomb, but Scurll ripped the tape off SHO’s ear, and slipped out. Scurll hit a pair of lariats for a near fall. Scurll did the finger break spot. SHO countered with a lariat. He hit another lariat, then hit a Last Ride on the knees for a near fall. 

SHO hit Shock Arrow for the pin. Awesome match. They tore the house down. Good luck to the guys who have to follow this. 

B BLOCK MATCH: RYUSUKE TAGUCHI DEFEATED ROCKY ROMERO 

Rocky came out with a basketball, while Taguchi came out with his rugby ball. They did some comedy with the basketball. Rocky threw the ball at Taguchi’s head, then hit a crossbody off the post to the floor. 

Taguchi sent Rocky to the floor with a hip attack, then hit a tope con hilo. Back inside, Rocky hit some chops. Taguchi came back with a series of hip attacks, and Rocky fired back with more chops. They traded forever clotheslines and hip attacks, then exchanged inverted atomic drops. 

Taguchi missed with a hip attack. Rocky missed a rewind kick, and Taguchi applied an ankle lock. Rocky escaped and hit a rana. He followed with a springboard DDT for a two count. Rocky applied an armbar. Taguchi tried to muscle out and reached the ropes. 

Rocky tried for Sliced Bread. Taguchi rolled through into a victory roll. They traded victory rolls, and Taguchi ended up getting the pin. 

A BLOCK MATCH: YOSHINOBU KANEMARU DEFEATED TAIJI ISHIMORI

Kanemaru attacked before the bell, and they fought into the crowd. They teased a countout, but Ishimori beat the count. Ishimori used the Yes Lock, but Kanemaru reached the ropes. Ishimori used a lung blower for a two count. 

Kanemaru blocked a Bloody Cross and sent Red Shoes into Ishimori. With the referee down, Kanemaru went for his whiskey. Ishimori got the whiskey bottle, but Red Shoes woke up, catching Ishimori with the bottle. Kanemaru spit whiskey in Ishimori’s eyes and rolled him up for the pin. 

B BLOCK MATCH: WILL OSPREAY DEFEATED BANDIDO

They started with a crazy sequence. Ospreay ended it with a monkey flip, a dropkick, then a plancha. Bandido hit a one-armed press slam, then a dropkick to the back of the head for a near fall. Bandido used a Romero Special, but Ospreay reached the ropes. 

They exchanged chops. Ospreay hit a handspring kick. He followed with a 619, then Pip Pip Cheerio for a near fall. Ospreay teased an inverted DDT, but Bandido slipped out and hit a dropkick. 

Bandido hit an inverted suplex and a flying knee strike. They exchanged strikes. Ospreay caught Bandido off a rana. He went for a powerbomb, but Bandido flipped it into a poison rana. Ospreay rolled outside, and Bandido hit a springboard Shooting Star Press to the floor. Insane. 

Back inside, Bandido hit a springboard DDT into a near fall. Ospreay hit a pop-up OsCutter into a double down. They exchanged strikes. Bandido hit a superkick. Ospreay hit a Canadian Destroyer for a near fall, then rolled into Cattle Mutilation. He followed with a powerbomb for a near fall. 

Ospreay teased an OsCutter, but Bandido hit a Spanish Fly for a two count. Bandido went for the 21 Plex, but Ospreay avoided it. Bandido went for it again, and Ospreay flipped out of it, landing on his feet. Ospreay hit a Spanish Fly for a near fall. 

Ospreay went to the top. Bandido cut him off and hit a fallaway slam off the top. He made a cover, but Ospreay grabbed the bottom rope, forcing a break. Bandido came off the second rope, but jumped right into a Storm Breaker for the pin. Fantastic match. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHINGO TAKAGI DEFEATED DRAGON LEE

Dragon offered a handshake at the outset. Shingo accepted, but held the grip and they began their opening sequence. Shingo missed a senton. He hit a shoulder block, but Dragon popped right up. 

Dragon sent Shingo outside with a rana. He went for a dive. Shingo side-stepped. Dragon saved the dive with a handspring off the apron, but Shingo made him pay with strikes, then a DDT on the floor. Back in the ring, Shingo hit a series of strikes in the corner. He dropped Dragon with a double sledge to the chest, then hit a senton. 

Shingo hit a vertical suplex for a two count. Shingo went for a Pumping Bomber, but Dragon countered with an STO. Shingo stepped to the apron. Dragon hit an enzuigiri. He teased a rana off the apron, but Shingo blocked it.

They continued to battle on the apron. Shingo hit a DVD on the apron, and Dragon fell to the floor. Back inside, Shingo hit a sliding lariat for a near fall. Shingo hit a series of punches and chops in the corner. Dragon followed with a dropkick into the opposite corner, then another. 

They faced off in the center of the ring. They exchanged strikes. Dragon hit a jumping knee. Shingo hit a clothesline, but Dragon followed with his own, then hit a suicide dive into about the fifth row. 
Dragon hit a straightjacket German into a bridge for a near fall. Dragon hit a superkick, but Shingo countered with a jab and a lariat. Shingo hit a slam and called for a back elbow off the ropes, but Dragon cut him off and hit his double stomp in the corner. 

Dragon hit a PK for a near fall. He teased Desnucadora, but Shingo countered with a pop-up Samoan Drop. Shingo blocked a knee strike, then hit a Noshigami. He followed with a Pumping Bomber for a great near fall.

Shingo went for Last of the Dragon. Dragon blocked it. He went for a second Noshigami, but Dragon blocked it and hit a knee strike. Dragon hit a knee strike, a poison rana, and went right into another knee strike. He covered, but Shingo kicked out at one. He hit another knee strike for a two count. 

Dragon went for Desnucadora, but Shingo reversed it into Last of the Dragon for the pin. Another classic match. 

A BLOCK STANDINGS

  • Shingo Takagi: 10
  • Taiji Ishimori: 8
  • Dragon Lee: 6
  • Jonathan Gresham: 6
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru: 4
  • SHO: 4
  • Marty Scurll: 4
  • Tiger Mask: 4
  • Titan: 4
  • TAKA Michinoku: 0

B BLOCK STANDINGS 

  • El Phantasmo: 10
  • Will Ospreay: 8
  • Ryusuke Taguchi: 8
  • Robbie Eagles: 6
  • YOH: 6
  • Bandido: 4
  • BUSHI: 4
  • Rocky Romero: 2
  • DOUKI: 2
  • Ren Narita: 0

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night three results: Dragon Lee vs. SHO

The second night of A Block action in Best of the Super Juniors 26 saw Dragon Lee and SHO push each other to the limit. 

Their main event showdown nearly went to the 30-minute time limit, before Lee was finally able to put SHO away, earning his first victory of the tournament. 

Here are full results and match recaps:

ROBBIE EAGLES & JADO DEFEATED REN NARITA & YUYA UEMURA

This was a very good opener. Narita and Uemura both hit nice double underhook suplexes. Jado used a kendo stick shot to turn the tide in Bullet Club’s favor. Eagles won with a backpack stunner on Uemura. 

TAICHI & DOUKI DEFEATED RYUSUKE TAGUCHI & SHOTA UMINO

This was a Suzuki-gun showcase. They used an attack before the opening bell to take control. They turned the match into a crowd brawl. Back inside, they worked over Taguchi. 

Umino got a hot tag and the crowd was hyped for his offense. Taichi won after hitting an Axe Bomber for a near fall, then using a stretch plum for the submission. Douki continues to disappoint me. He used a pipe to attack Taguchi after the match. 

JUICE ROBINSON, BANDIDO & WILL OSPREAY DEFEATED YOH, ROCKY ROMERO & TOA HENARE

YOH and Bandido paired off at the start. Bandido hit a gorilla press slam on YOH, which also took out Rocky. Juice and his team worked over YOH. 

Rocky and Ospreay paired off for an excellent sequence. The closing section saw Juice and Henare go back and forth. Juice won after a Left Hand of God and Pulp Friction. 

After the match, they played the same Time’s Up video that plays in every Juice segment. 

TETSUYA NAITO & BUSHI DEFEATED EL PHANTASMO & GEDO

Phantasmo teased shaking hands with BUSHI at the outset, but flipped him off and kicked him in the gut instead. Phantasmo and Gedo went to work on BUSHI. Gedo went for brass knuckles, but Naito jumped in and stopped him. 

Naito hit the combinacion de cabron, and BUSHI hit an MX, then pinned Gedo. 

A BLOCK MATCH: JONATHAN GRESHAM DEFEATED TAKA MICHINOKU

A nice little grappling battle here. Gresham is a great technician, and TAKA went hold for hold with him. The match didn’t have a lot of heat, but it was fun. 

Gresham used a variation of a finger break spot to take control of the bout. He worked over TAKA’s left arm. TAKA used an eye poke and a chinlock. TAKA slapped on a headscissors on the mat, but Gresham powered out. 

TAKA maintained control of the bout with two knee strikes. He used another headscissors, but Gresham slipped out and worked on TAKA’s left arm some more. He used a magistral cradle for a two count. 

Gresham tried for an octopus hold, but TAKA made it to the ropes. TAKA briefly applied the Just Facelock, but Gresham reached the ropes. TAKA applied the hold again, and again Gresham forced a rope break. 

Gresham hit a quebrada, then used a backslide for a near fall. Gresham got another quick near fall, then went back to the octopus hold before TAKA tapped out. 

A BLOCK MATCH: TIGER MASK IV DEFEATED YOSHINOBU KANEMARU 

Tiger attacked Kanemaru before the bell. Tiger hit some kicks on the floor. He went for a kick with his bad right leg, and Kanemaru caught it and posted it. Kanemaru worked over Tiger’s leg as the pace slowed. 

Kanemaru went to the top for Deep Impact, but Tiger cut him off, hitting an arm drag off the top. Tiger hit a tombstone, then a Tiger Driver, picking up a near fall. Kanemaru got back to his feet and hit Deep Impact, but Tiger kicked out. 

Kanemaru used a figure four, but Tiger forced a break. Tiger hit a flying wheel kick. Kanemaru tried to go back to the figure four, but Tiger used a small package and got the pin. Kanemaru unmasked Tiger after the bell. 

Considering Tiger’s limitations, this was okay. He really needs to pick his spots in a long tournament like this, so I’m okay with some shortcut matches like this. 

A BLOCK MATCH: SHINGO TAKAGI DEFEATED TITAN

Titan teased a tope con hilo early, but settled for a flying headscissors on the floor. Back inside, he went for a top rope rana. Shingo dropped Titan across the top rope, then clotheslined him over the top. 

Titan came back, hitting a kick that sent Shingo outside. Titan hit a suicide dive that went about three rows deep into the crowd. Titan got a near fall, then hit a springboard splash for another. Shingo went for a Pumping Bomber, but Titan ducked it. 

Titan used La Mistica to set up a rolling pinning combination for a near fall. He went for the same combination again, but Shingo escaped. 

Shingo hit Noshigami, the Pumping Bomber, then Last of the Dragon, and got the pin. Good match. 

A BLOCK MATCH: TAIJI ISHIMORI DEFEATED MARTY SCURLL

Ishimori worked a wristlock at the outset. Scurll was frustrated, as he would set up an escape but Ishimori always found a way back to the wristlock. Scurll finally found an escape and stomped on Ishimori’s left arm. 

Scurll hit a superplex. Ishimori rolled outside and avoided Scurll’s superkick on the apron. Ishimori followed with a Golden Triangle off the post. Back inside, Ishimori used a chinlock and focused on attacking Scurll’s neck. 

Ishimori hit a sliding German for a near fall. Ishimori hit some strikes, and Scurll asked him to hit him again. Scurll hit a tornado DDT, then a series of strikes in the corner. Scurll hit a superkick on the apron. 

Scurll hit a stomp off the second rope. He blocked a handspring kick, then hit a powerbomb for a near fall. Scurll went for the Black Plague, but Ishimori turned it into a cradle. They traded a series of cradles for near falls. 

Ishimori hit a shotgun dropkick, then used double knees in the corner for a two count. Scurll stomped away at Ishimori’s left arm, trying to set up the chicken wing. Ishimori hit a handspring kick into a double down. 

Scurll went for a tombstone. Ishimori tried to reverse it into one of his own, but he stumbled, dropped Scurll on his head, and may have knocked himself out tripping and hitting the second rope. Everyone was okay, but this was scary. 

Ishimori hit a lungblower for a near fall. Scurll escaped a Bloody Cross attempt and applied the chicken wing. Ishimori refused to tap, so Scurll decided to try for a pin instead, but Ishimori kicked out. 

Ishimori used La Mistica to set up a Yes Lock. Scurll slid out of the hold and used a Yes Lock to transition back to the chicken wing, before hitting a half-and-half suplex. Scurll hit a lariat for a two count, then a package driver for another. 

Ishimori avoided the Black Plague and hit a rebound lariat for a near fall. Ishimori then hit Bloody Cross to pick up the win.

Some scary moments after the botched tombstone spot, and the crowd was in and out of it, but a very good match.

A BLOCK MATCH: DRAGON LEE DEFEATED SHO

They began with an intense striking battle in the center of the ring. The pace slowed, but they continued to trade strikes. SHO sent Lee to the floor. SHO tried for a lariat on the floor, but Lee ducked, and SHO posted his own right arm. 

Lee went for a headscissors off the apron, but SHO caught him and hit a powerbomb on the apron. SHO used a crucifix hold to try for a submission, but Lee made it to the ropes. Lee sent SHO to the floor, then hit a crazy suicide dive. 

Back inside, Lee used a Fujiwara armbar on the right arm, but SHO made it to the ropes. SHO kicked at Lee’s right arm. Both sold their right arms. They clotheslined each other over the top rope. They teased a double countout, but both made it back in at 19. 

They traded strikes. SHO hit a lariat, then hit a deadlift German into a bridge for a near fall. SHO hit two rolling Germans, but Lee forced a rope break before the third could connect. SHO kicked at Lee’s right arm again. 

Lee used a Fujiwara armbar, but SHO forced a rope break. They fought on the top rope, and Lee hit a double stomp. Lee picked up a near fall. 

Lee went for Desnucadora, but SHO turned it into a backstabber, then a cross armbreaker, but Lee made it to the bottom rope. 

SHO went for Shock Arrow, and he finally got it after a series of counters. Lee kicked out of Shock Arrow at two. They traded jumping knee strikes. Lee hit a poison rana, but SHO no-sold it and hit a clothesline. 

They traded forearm strikes from their knees. Back on their feet, they exchanged again. SHO got the better of it, and he ended the exchange with a clothesline. SHO hit a lungblower on his knees, then a powerbomb on the knees. He made a cover, but Lee kicked out. 

SHO went for Shock Arrow again. Lee slipped out and hit a jumping knee strike at the 25-minute mark. Lee went for Desnucadora, but SHO slipped out and applied an armbar. Lee made the ropes initially, but SHO maintained the hold. 

Lee powerbombed out of the armbar, then hit a pair of knee strikes for a near fall. Lee hit Desnucadora to win.

The match really picked up in the last 10 minutes and was a fine main event. 

A BLOCK STANDINGS

  • Shingo Takagi 2-0
  • Taiji Ishimori 2-0
  • Tiger Mask 2-0
  • Dragon Lee 1-1
  • Titan 1-1
  • Marty Scurll 1-1
  • Jonathan Gresham 1-1
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru 0-2
  • SHO 0-2
  • TAKA Michinoku 0-2

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 12 results: KUSHIDA vs. Dragon Lee

Saturday’s New Japan show in Gunma featured the penultimate night of B Block action. 

While the A Block standings are a mess heading into Sunday’s semifinal in Korakuen Hall, the B Block comes down to the Hiromu Takahashi vs. KUSHIDA matchup. If there’s a winner, that winner gets a spot in the tournament final. If there is a draw and Marty Scurll wins, then Scurll takes the block. 

If there is a draw and Scurll loses, well, let’s hope it doesn’t come to that. I have a headache.

Here are the results and a recap of the BOSJ tournament matches from Saturday at the New Sunpia Takasaki. 

Prelim Results:

  • Tomoyuki Oka, Tiger Mask & Shota Umino defeated ACH, Yuya Uemura & Yota Tsuji when Oka submitted Tsuji with a Boston Crab
  • YOSHI-HASHI & YOH defeated Taiji Ishimori & Chase Owens when YOSHI-HASHI submitted Owens with a Butterfly Lock
  • Flip Gordon & Toa Henare defeated Will Ospreay & Gedo when Gordon pinned Gedo after a Four Flippy Splash
  • BUSHI, SANADA & EVIL defeated Minoru Suzuki, Yoshinobu Kanemaru & TAKA Michinoku when BUSHI pinned TAKA after an MX

B Block Matches:

Chris Sabin defeated El Desperado

Desperado hid by the entrance and jumped Sabin as he stepped out ontoo the ramp. He sent him into the audience and hit him with chairs and pied chairs on top of him. Desperado beat him all over the building, and the referee started counting Sabin out for some reason, but he made it back inside. 

Desperado wedged a chair between the ropes and sent Sabin into it. The beatdown continued. Sabin got a small package for a nearfall, then began to mount a comeback. He hit a springboard DDT, and a plancha. He sent Desperado into the crowd, and hit a flip dive off the apron to a seated Desperado on the floor. 

Sabin hit a reverse Frankensteiner and a missile dropkick, picking up a nearfall. Desperado recovered, and hit a vicious spear, before using Guitarra de Angel for a nearfall. They traded reversals and counters, until Sabin ducked a chairshot, and kicked the chair back into Desperado’s face. 

The finish saw Sabin hit an enziguri, then a lariat for a nearfall, then hit Cradle Shock for the pin. 

I appreciated the layout here, I don’t recall seeing a ton of matches with this exact construction. The work itself was solid, but not spectacular. 

Marty Scurll defeated Ryusuke Taguchi

They started with a lot of comedy. Scurll would do a taunt, Taguchi would copy it. Scurll did his wing flapping taunt, and Taguchi did a penguin. Scurll would do a momve, and Taguchi would try to mirror it, but wouldn’t be able to, and sold. Scurll used some hip attacks, but Taguchi hit one, and his butt is more powerful. 

Scurll hit a superkick on the apron, before taunting the crowd. He used a back rake, and some short pucnhes, before throwing Taguchi back inside. Scurll stretched Taguchi and hit a backstabber, before Taguchi and his powerful ass made a comeback. He hit a bunch of hip attacks and a nice tope. 

Scurll went for a surfboard, but Taguchi reached the ropes. They went to the top and Scurll teased hitting an exploder, before settling for a superplex, and a nearfall. Taguchi rolled to the floor, and applied an ankle lock to Scurll on the apron. Scurll powered out, sent Taguchi into the post, then sent him ack inside, picking up a nearfall. 

Scurll teased the finger break, Taguchi reversed it, but Scurll finally got it. Taguchi hit an enziguri, then went into his Nakamura tribute act. He went for the Bomaye, but Scurll turned it into the chicken wing. Taguchi rolled through into a cradle, getting a nearfall. Scurll hit the Black Plague for a nearfall. 

Scurll grabbed his umbrella, but Taguchi cut him off. Taguchi pretended that he had taken a low blow, and in the ensuing confusion, Scurll pushed Red Shoes, who pushed him back, right into a Taguchi rollup, but Taguchi only got a two count. Taguchi hit a bridging suplex for another nearfall. 

Taguchi went for another, but Red Shoes took a bump. Taguchi put on the ankle lock, and Scurll tapped, but with no referee, it didn’t matter. 

They did the Angle/Guerrero finish from Wrestlemania 20. While Taguchi revived the referee, Scurll unlaced his boot. Taguchi put on an ankle lock, but Scurll slipped out of the boot, and small packaged Taguchi for the pin.  

I liked the comedy at the beginning, but this didn’t need to go almost twenty minutes. 

Hiromu Takahashi defeated SHO

They came out firing, immediately trading strikes and shoulder blocks. SHO got the best of the exchange, and hit a dropkick. He sent Hiromu to the apron, then hit him with a dropkick, sending him to the floor. He used an armbar, before Hiromu used a dropkick of his own to send SHO to the floor. 

Hiromu tokk control of the match, using a powerbomb from the apron to the floor. They teased a countout, as SHO sold his neck. Hiromu hit a shotgun dropkick for a nearfall, and the pace slowed, as he taunted SHO. Hiromu used a tarantula, and a low dropkick to send SHO outside, then hit a dropkick from the apron to the floor. 

SHO made a comeback with a powerslam, a lariat, and a series of kicks, before hitting a backstabber, and applying a cross armbreaker. Hiromu reached the ropes, then caught SHO coming off the ropes, and hit a powerbomb. They traded lariats and suplexes, and SHO went after Hiromu’s left arm. 

They crawled to the apron, and exchanged strikes. SHO hit a suplex on the apron, but Hiromu came back, and hit the Dynamite Plunger for a nearfall. SHO went for a charge into the corner, but Hiromu suplexed him into the pad. He went for another Dynamite Plunger, but SHO turned it into a cross armbreaker, which the crowd bought as a potential finish, but Hiromu reached the ropes. 

They traded kicks. Hiromu went for a reverse Frankensteiner, but SHO caught him, powerbombed him, and hit the powerbomb on the knees for a nearfall. Hiromu went for the Frankensteiner again, but this time he got it, and slapped on the triangle choke. SHO fought, but eventually tapped. Hiromu initally refused to release the hold, and it took several Young Lions to break it up. Great match. 

KUSHIDA defeated Dragon Lee

They started with hip tosses, armdrags, and reversals. KUSHIDA went for a rana, but Lee flipped out, and hit one of his own, sending KUSHIDA to the floor. He took his time getting back into the ring. He used an armbar in the ring, then a crucifix while Lee was caught in the ropes. Lee tried to roll to the floor, but KUSHIDA brought him back inside, and continued attacking his left arm. 

KUSHIDA got tossed to the floor, and Lee hit a great tope. Back inside, he attacked the head and neck of KUSHIDA with strikes, then hit a dropkick in the corner. Lee hit a backbreaker, then used an armbar. Lee tried to run the ropes, but KUSHIDA hit a back handspring elbow, sending him to the floor, before connecting with a crazy senton from the post to the floor. 

Back inside, KUSHIDA went for a moonsault, but Lee got his knees up, and slapped the mat, begging the crowd to get into it. Lee teased his dropkick from the ring to the floor, but KUSHIDA blocked it. They traded strikes, and both fell to the floor. 

Lee was first inside, allowing KUSHIDA to hit a springoard Frankensteiner. He resumed his attack on Lee’s left arm, using the Hoverboard Lock, but Lee reached the ropes. KUSHIDA became frustrated, as he was unable to put Lee away. He got careless, and left Lee an opening. Lee hit a pair of suplexes, then applied a sleeper with a body triangle. KUSHIDA reached the ropes, grabbing them with his teeth. 

They exchanged strikes, and both collapsed to the mat, as the crowd got behind them. This was one of the better crowds of the tour. Lee hit a shining wizard for a nearfall. They went to the top. KUSHIDA used a kimura, but Lee popped out and hit a footstomp for a nearfall. 

The finish saw Lee go for a powerbomb, but KUSHIDA turned it into a DDT. Lee cradled him for a nearfall, then hit a Frankensteiner. He went for a suplex, but KUSHIDA turned it into Back to the Future, and picked up the victory. A great main event. 

Standings heading into Sunday’s Semifinals:

A Block Standings:

Taiji Ishimori 4-2 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, BUSHI, Tiger Mask)

Will Ospreay 4-2 (Holds tiebreaker over Tiger Mask, YOH)

Flip Gordon 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Ishimori, Tiger Mask)

BUSHI 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, Gordon)

Tiger Mask 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over YOH, BUSHI)

YOH 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Gordon, BUSHI)

ACH 2-4 (Eliminated)

Yoshinobu Kanemaru 2-4 (Eliminated)

B Block Standings:

Hiromu Takahashi 4-2 (Wins B Block with a win over KUSHIDA, holds tiebreaker over Scurll)

KUSHIDA 4-2 (Wins B Block with a win over Takahashi, holds tiebreaker over Scurll)

Marty Scurll 4-2 (Can only win B Block with a win over SHO and a KUSHIDA/Takahashi draw)

Dragon Lee 3-3 (Eliminated by virtue of loss to KUSHIDA)

Chris Sabin 3-3 (Eliminated by virtue of loss to Takahashi)

El Desperado 2-4 (Eliminated)

SHO 2-4 (Eliminated)

Ryusuke Taguchi 2-4 (Eliminated)

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 11 results: YOH vs. Kanemaru

Thursday’s Best of the Super Juniors show in Aomori narrowed the list of potential A Block winners. 

Yoshinobu Kanemaru and ACH were eliminated by virtue of their losses. With the last A Block action set to take place on Sunday, Taiji Ishimori will win the block with a victory. Will Ospreay will take the block with a victory and an Ishimori loss. 

If both Ospreay and Ishimori lose Sunday, we’ll have to summon Mike Tenay and Don West and have them explain the various tiebreakers. Or maybe Scott Steiner can break them down for us in a promo. 

Here are the results of Thursday’s show, held at the Hachinohe City East Gymnasium. 

Prelim Matches:

  • Shota Umino & KUSHIDA defeated Dragon Lee & Yuya Uemura when Umino made Uemura submit to the Boston Crab.
  • Chase Owens & Marty Scurll defeated Ryusuke Taguchi & Tomoyuki Oka when Owens pinned Oka after a Package Piledriver.
  • Minoru Suzuki & El Desperado defeated Chris Sabin & Toa Henare when Suzuki pinned Henare after a Gotch Piledriver.
  • Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi defeated YOSHI-HASHI & SHO when Naito pinned SHO after a Destino.

A Block Matches:

BUSHI defeated Flip Gordon

Flip hit a variation on the 619 around the post, but BUSHI sent him to the floor on a springboard attempt. BUSHI blatantly used a chair, before sending Flip back inside and choking him with his shirt. BUSHI got the first nearfall of the match off a neckbreaker. 

BUSHI worked a headscissors, attacking Flip’s head and neck. He hit a missile dropkick with Flip draped over the ropes, and got another nearfall. Flip made a comeback, clotheslining BUSHI on the top rope, and followed with a springboard dropkick and a tope, before hitting a cool springboard spear. 

Flip hit a rolling senton, a standing shooting star, and a moonsault, picking up his first nearfall. He missed a phoenix splash, and BUSHI planted hm with a DDT. He connected with a missile dropkick, but Flip countered a neckbreaker attempt with a falcon arrow for a nearfall. 

They traded strikes, and BUSHI went up top. Flip hit a springboard superkick, knocking BUSHI to the mat, but BUSHI was able to get his knees up, blocking a 450. BUSHI hit an enziguri and a codebreaker for a nearfall, then hit the MX, and got the pin. 

There was nothing wrong with this, but I was still left thinking that this was one of the weaker bouts of the tournament so far. 

Taiji Ishimori defeated ACH

ACH got the best of a good opening sequence, hitting a chop. He has some of the best opening spots in the business right now. Ishimori cut him off, and hit a seated senton, before going to work on the taped shoulder. He hit an enziguri, and his sliding German. 

ACH made a comeback, sent Ishimori outside, and hit a suicide dive. Back in the ring, he hit a frog splash for a nearfall. He teased the deadlift bridging suplex spot, before hitting it and getting a two count. He went for it again, but Ishimori hit a handspring enziguri, leading to a double down. 

They traded strikes, and ACH hit his doube footstomp. He connected with double knees in the corner, and used a lungblower for a nearfall. He missed a 450, allowing Ishimori to hit a shotgun dropkick. Ishimori used the lungblower for a nearfall, before hitting the Bloody Cross for the pin. 

This was solid, but both men have had better performances in the tournament. They only went about twelve minutes, and the lack of time kept them from getting out of first or second gear. 

Will Ospreay defeated Tiger Mask

They had a nice, simple opening exchange, filled with tackles, dropdowns, and leapfrogs. Ospreay used kicks to attack the left arm, but Tiger was able to counter with a tombstone, sending Ospreay rolling outside, selling his bad neck. They teased a countout, but Ospreay made it back in. 

Tiger used a chinlock. Ospreay fired back with strikes, but the neck gave out on him, and Tiger hit a guillotine legdrop. Ospreay recovered and hit a corkscrew enziguri, and a 619. His neck gave out again. Tiger teased a double underhook superplex, but Ospreay countered, and hit a sidewalk slam for a nearfall. 

Ospreay went for the Storm Breaker, and Tiger went for the Tiger Suplex, but they countered, and knocked each other down with simultaneous kicks. Ospreay hit the Robinson Special, but missed an Oscutter attempt. 

Tiger used a scissored armbar, and double underhook powerbomb for a nearfall. He followed with the double underhook superplex, which got another close nearfall. He went for another tombstone, but Ospreay reversed it into the Storm Breaker, and got the pin. 

They worked hard, and Ospreay did a good job of making Tiger look like a credible threat, but this was the weakest Ospreay match of the tournament. 

YOH defeated Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Kanemaru jumped YOH during his introduction, and sent him to the floor. He threw him into the first few rows, and sent him into the post. YOH beat the count back inside, and Kanemaru applied a camel clutch. YOH rolled to the ropes, and Kanemaru hit a dropkick on the apron, and a DDT to the floor. 

YOH beat the count again, and Kanemaru hit three consecutive DDTs for a nearfall, before continuing to attack the head and neck with stomps and a headscissors. They traded strikes, and YOH hit a dragon screw, his first meaningful offense of the bout. He hit a slingshot footstomp, and a neckbreaker. 

Kanemaru low-bridged YOH on a charge, sending him to the floor. YOH made it back inside, and hit a tope. They teased a Kanemaru countout, but he made it back inside, and YOH hit a superplex into a falcon arrow for a nearfall. 

YOH missed a senton bomb, but recovered as Kanemaru went up top. He went for a superplex, but Kanemaru hit a DDT from the top, and they traded nearfalls. Kanemaru hit a tornado DDT, and both men went down, selling exhaustion. 

Kanemaru hit a dropkick, and connected with an inverted DDT on the apron. He prepared for the whiskey mist as Red Shoes counted YOH. YOH beat the count, and while Red Shoes took the whiskey bottle from Kanemaru, he sprayed the mist on YOH, hit a low blow, and got a nearfall off Deep Impact. 

Kanemaru hit a brainbuster for another nearfall, then went to the top. He jumped into a superkick, but hit a lariat on the rebound. He went for another brainbuster, but YOH cradled him for a nearfall, then rolled into his Five Star Clutch, and got the victory. 

This was another good, but not great main event, and it’s clear from this show that everyone in the tournament is feeling the impact of working so many tough matches in a short period of time. 

A Block Standings:

Taiji Ishimori 4-2 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, BUSHI, Tiger Mask)

Will Ospreay 4-2 (Holds tiebreaker over Tiger Mask, YOH)

Flip Gordon 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Ishimori, Tiger Mask)

BUSHI 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Ospreay, Gordon)

Tiger Mask 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over YOH, BUSHI)

YOH 3-3 (Holds tiebreaker over Gordon, BUSHI)

ACH 2-4 (Eliminated)

Yoshinobu Kanemaru 2-4 (Eliminated)

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 10 results: KUSHIDA vs. Desperado

Night ten of the 25th Best of the Super Juniors featured an interesting match order, as the tournament’s B Block took center stage. 

KUSHIDA and El Desperado closed Wednesday’s show, held in Fukushima at the Big Palette Fukushima. 

Looking at the card beforehand, I would have put Marty Scurll and Dragon Lee on last. With the benefit of hindsight, I would have closed the show with Chris Sabin and Hiromu Takahashi, as they delivered the performance of the night. 

Here are the results from the show. 

Prelim Results:

  • YOSHI-HASHI & Will Ospreay defeated Tiger Mask & Shota Umino when YOSHI-HASHI submitted Umino with a Butterfly Lock
  • Chase Owens & Taiji Ishimori defeated ACH & Tomoyuki Oka when Owens pinned Oka after a Package Piledriver
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Minoru Suzuki defeated YOH & Gedo when Kanemaru pinned Gedo after a Deep Impact
  • Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI defeated Flip Gordon & Toa Henare when Naito pinned Henare after a Destino

B Block Matches:

Marty Scurll defeated Dragon Lee

They opened with some nice chain wrestling, with neither man gaining a clear advantage. Scurll bent the fingers back, then took control of the match, hitting a kick to the quadriceps, and a backbreaker. Scurll tied the top of Lee’s mask to the bottom rope and attacked, focusing on the left arm. 

Lee made a comeback, sending Scurll to the floor, before hitting a tope con hilo. Back in the ring, Lee connected with a dropkick in the corner, and got a nearfall. He hot a double underhook backbreaker and a running knee for another nearfall. 

Dragon went for another dive, but Scurll cut him off. He hit an enziguri on the apron, and a superkick, sending Lee to the floor. Marty got a nearfall off a knee strike, and connected with a throw from the top rope. 

Scurll missed a moonsault. He teased the finger break spot, but Lee hit a DDT gor a nearfall. A nice exchange of strikes and lariats led to a double down. Lee used a sleeper and a knee strike for a nearfall, but Scurll countered with the finger break spot. 

Lee was able to cradle Scurll for a nearfall. Scurll countered with a Code Red, but could not get a three count. Lee hit a double footstomp from the top, but Scurll countered with a DDT and a fisherman’s buster for a nearfall. Dragon hit a standing Spanish Fly, as the exchange of nearfalls continued. 

The finish saw Scurll connect with an inverted superplex, before locking on the chicken wing for the submission. 

They worked a different match than I expected, with Lee not doing nearly as much flying as usual. It was still quite good, but I am perplexed as to why working Dragon’s left arm never really led to anything. 

Ryusuke Taguchi defeated SHO

This is worth seeing if only for the spot where SHO was shooting invisible arrows at Taguchi, 

They started with the standard comedy built around Taguchi’s butt. SHO worked over the left arm, including applying a post-assisted armbar. He spent the next several minutes working a variety of holds, from abdominal stretches, to a triangle, to what I think was supposed to be a figure four. 

Taguchi made a comeback with hip attacks, and a pair of really nice dives to the floor. He went for Three Amigos, but SHO countered, hitting three rolling suplexes of his own. Taguchi hit a dropkick, but ate a lariat. He was able to rebound and apply the ankle lock, but SHO reached the ropes. 

Taguchi did his Nakamura impression, but when he went for the Bomaye, he ran into a suplex. SHO hit a lungblower for a nearfall, but Taguchi backdropped out of his finish and hit an exploder. He applied the ankle lock again, but SHO reached the ropes after rolling through several times. 

The finish saw Taguchi hit a nice bridging Korriyama, picking up the pinfall victory. 

This went too long for my liking, but some of the comedy at the outset worked, and the crowd was into seeing Taguchi win. 

Hiromu Takahashi defeated Chris Sabin

Hiromu went after Sabin at the bell, but Sabin responded, hitting a monkey flip, followed by a senton from the apron to the floor, and a high cross. Hiromu responded, and after initially countering a sunset bomb attempt, Sabin ended up taking a powerbomb on the apron. Hiromu took control. 

He used a tarantula in the ropes, before hitting a shotgun dropkick from the apron to the floor. He methodically worked on Sabin’s head and neck in the ring, using more brawling tactics than usual. Those tactics left an opening for Sabin, though, who responded by winning a striking battle, before planting Hiromu with a DDT. 

Sabin hit a missile dropkick, a Yakuza kick, a reverse Frankensteiner, and a tornado DDT, but Hiromu took all of it, and regained control with a powerbomb and a Dynamite Plunger. They traded superkicks and lariats, as the match reached the home stretch. 

The finishing sequence saw Sabin score a nearfall with a powerbomb into a jackknife cover, but he was unable to score a pinfall after an All Hail Sabin. He went for another, but Hiromu countered, and slapped on a triangle choke, forcing Sabin to tap. 

This was a good match, my favorite on the show to this point. Sabin has been impressive in this tournament. He can’t work at the pace of the best in the world, but he brings a lot of other things to the table. 

KUSHIDA defeated El Desperado

KUSHIDA warded off the trademark opening attack from Suzuki-gun’s Desperado, and connected with a cannonball to a seated Desperado on the floor. Desperado quickly gained the upper hand, as the action spilled into the audience. He used a handcart, and pushed KUSHIDA around the building, taking out row after row of chairs. 

They teased a countout, and KUSHIDA sold his left leg as a result of the assault. Desperado sent KUSHIDA into an exposed buckle, and continued working the leg, using a half crab. KUSHIDA made a comeback, hitting a tope con hilo to the floor, and a handspring into a back elbow in the ring. Desperado cut him off, and continued to attack the leg. 

Desperado pulled a Bill Watts and pulled up the padding at ringside, and teased a superplex to the floor. That seems like an exceedingly bad idea for a spot. Someone will try it soon, I’m sure. KUSHIDA was able to counter, and hit a flying cross armbreaker to the canvas. 

Desperado went for a rolling senton, but bumped Red Shoes in the process. KUSHIDA turned the senton into a Hoverboard Lock, and Desperado tapped, but with the referee out, no dice. He gave up the hold, allowing Desperado to hit a drop toe hold onto a chair, followed by a chair shot. He hit an Angle Slam as Red Shoes was revived, bit only got a two count. 

The finishing sequence saw Desperado go for a Guitarra de Angel, but KUSHIDA coutered, and sent him into the exposed buckle. KUSHIDA hit a scary looking springboard Frankensteiner, almost spiking himself right on his head, and rolled into a cradle for a nearfall. He immediately followed with Back to the Future, and got the pin. 

As a matter of personal preference, I would rather the Suzuki-gun chicanery to take place earlier in the card, rather than closing the show. This was fine, even good, but I’m still waiting for a trademark KUSHIDA performance in this tournament.

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 9 results: Ospreay vs. Kanemaru

The ninth night of the 25th Best of the Super Juniors showcased the tournament’s A Block. 

Taiji Ishimori, Tiger Mask, Will Ospreay, and Flip Gordon sit atop the block following Tuesday’s show, held in Tochigi at the Tochigi City Athletic Park Gymnasium. 

Prelim Results:

  • Chase Owens & Marty Scurll defeated Dragon Lee & Yota Tsuji when Owens pinned Tsuji after a Package Piledriver.
  • YOSHI-HASHI & SHO defeated Ryusuke Taguchi & Tomoyuki Oka when Oka submitted to YOSHI-HASHI’s Butterfly Lock.
  • Minoru Suzuki & El Desperado defeated KUSHIDA & Shota Umino when Suzuki pinned Umino after a Gotch Piledriver.
  • Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi defeated Chris Sabin & Toa Henare when Naito pinned Henare after a Destino.

A Block Matches:

Taiji Ishimori defeated Tiger Mask

Taiji jumped Tiger as soon as he stepped through the ropes, and worked him over with chops and closed fists. Tiger made a brief comeback, and Taiji sold his kicks like crazy, but Taiji regained the upper hand and went for the mask. 
Taiji landed some forearm strikes, but Tiger was able to come back with his kicks and a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. Tiger hit a hip toss off the top rope, and picked up a nearfall. He went for a Tiger Suplex, but when Taiji looked to counter, he switched to the cross armbreaker. Taiji reached the ropes, breaking the hold. 

Taiji hit double knees in the corner, and followed with a runing knee strike, before slapping on a crossface. Tiger reached the ropes, and got a brief comeback, including hitting a Tiger Suplex for a nearfall. He hit a Tiger Suplex from the top for another nearfall, then applied an armbar, but Taiji reached the ropes. 

Tiger went for the Tiger Clutch, but Taiji hit him with a knee strike and a lungblower, then hit the Bloody Cross for the pin. 

Tiger is obviouslly more physically limited than anyone else in the tournament,  but it’s a lot of fun to see how his matches are put together with that in mind. This was good, and Taiji was a great opponent for him. 

BUSHI defeated ACH

ACH got a double-leg, then torw off BUSHI’s shirt and landed some chops. BUSHI responded, using the shirt to choke ACH, and began working over his heavily taped shoulder. BUSHI hit a Hangman’s DDT on the apron, and continued his assault on the floor. 

Back inside, BUSHI used an STF and an armbar, working the shoulder. He hit a guillotine legdrop, before ACH was able to mount a comeback. ACH landed a double footstomp to the back, a uranage, and a bridging suplex for a nearfall. He followed with a backbreaker, but BUSHI came back with a missile dropkick and a rana from the ring to the floor. 

Back in the ring, ACH hit a DVD for a nearfall, and BUSHI countered a deadlift suplex into a cradle for a nearfall. ACH hit a deadlift suplex, and a running knee in the corner. He went to the top, but missed a 450 attempt. ACH countered an MX attempt, but BUSHI hit a backstabber, leading to a double down. 

BUSHI was first up, and hit an MX, but only got a nearfall. He followed with an MX from the second rope, and got the pin. 

This felt more like a collection of moves than a match with any real flow to it. They worked hard, but it was neither man’s best outing.

YOH defeated Flip Gordon

Flip got the best of a hot opening exchange, hitting a dropkick and a standing shooting star. He hit a handspring back elbow, but missed another, allowing YOH to hit a slingshot footstomp, a neckbreaker, and a standing senton for a nearfall. 

YOH worked a chinlock and a headscissors, as the pace slowed. He followed with a back elbow and a snap suplex, scoring a nearfall. Flip hit an enziguri, and a springboard dropkick, sending YOH outside. He hit a crossbody from the top rope to the floor, and a springboard Sling Blade, back in the ring. 

YOH countered a cradle attempt with a guillotine, and landed some Misawa elbows. Flip came back with a superkick, a rolling senton, and another standing sooting star, but YOH landed a superkick, leading to a double down. 

They traded forearm strikes, with Flip getting the bes of the exchange. YOH went for the superplex into a Falcon Arrow, but Flip turned it into a Falcon Arrow of his own for a nearfall. Flip hit a top rope 450 for a nearfall, but ate a superkick, and YOH bridged into the Five Star Clutch, and got the three count. 

This was a good action bout, and a good showing for both guys. 

Will Ospreay defeated Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Kanemaru jumped Ospreay as he turned his back during ring introductions, but Ospreay was able to respond. He sent Kanemaru to the floor, and hit a plancha. They brawled into the first row, but as Ospreay went for a running attack, Kanemaru connected with a chair shot. He continued to attack Ospreay with a chair, driving it into Ospreay’s neck and shoulder. 

Back in the ring, Kanemaru used a headscissors, and a Bomaye. He pulled Ospreay back to the floor, and hit a DDT. Ospreay beat the count back inside, but Kanemaru tore off his shoulder tape, and applied a camel clutch. Ospreay hit a handspring enziguri and a 619, gaining momemtum for the first time. He followed with a springboard forearm for a nearfall. 

Kanemaru halted Ospreay’s momentum, hitting a DDT, and an inverted DDT, but Ospreay was able to counter with a standing shooting star, earning another nearfall. He went for a Storm Breaker, but Kanemaru countered, and Red Shoes took a bump. Ospreay went for the cover, but with the referee out, it was to no avail. 

Kanemaru hit a low blow. Ospreay stopped a chair shot, but Red Shoes woke up in time to stop Ospreay from using the chair himself. With Red Shoes distracted, Kanemaru went for the whiskey mist, but Ospreay kicked him in the gut, and Kanemaru spit the whiskey in the air. Ospreay hit a sitout inverted DDT for a nearfall. 

Ospreay connected with the Robinson Special. He went for an Oscutter, but Kanemaru countered with a dropkick. Kanemaru hit a brainbuster, but only got a two count. He hit Deep Impact, but Ospreay kicked out of that as well. 
Kanemaru came off the top, right into a roundhouse kick. Ospreay hit a superkick, a Burning Star Press, and a corkscrew splash off the top for a nearfall, then hit the Storm Breaker for the win. 

This was something of a styles clash, with Ospreay’s aerial tactics and Kanemaru’s brawling tendencies. The ref bump was to be expected given Kanemaru’s Suzuki-gun loyalties, but felt out of place in an Ospreay match. Still, this was good for what it was, and Ospreay never has bad matches. 

Here are the current tournament standings, and the results of Tuesday’s show.

A Block Standings:

Taiji Ishimori 3-2

Tiger Mask 3-2

Will Ospreay 3-2

Flip Gordon 3-2

BUSHI 2-3

ACH 2-3

YOH 2-3

Yoshinobu Kanemaru 2-3

B Block Standings:

Dragon Lee 3-1

Chris Sabin 2-2

Marty Scurll 2-2

El Desperado 2-2

KUSHIDA 2-2

SHO 2-2

Hiromu Takahashi 2-2

Ryusuke Taguchi 1-3

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 7 results: Ospreay vs. BUSHI

The 25th Best of the Super Juniors tournament continued Saturday with Night Seven’s A Block action, held at the Nagoya Congress Center Event Hall in Aichi. Here are the results.

Prelim Matches:

  • Shota Umino & Chris Sabin defeated Yuya Uemura & Dragon Lee when Umino submitted Uemura with the Boston Crab.
  • YOSHI-HASHI & SHO defeated Tomoyuki Oka & KUSHIDA when YOSHI-HASHI submitted Oka with the Butterfly Lock.
  • Minoru Suzuki & El Desperado defeated Chase Owens & Marty Scurll when Suzuki pinned Owens after a Gotch Piledriver.
  • Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi defeated Ryusuke Taguchi & Toa Henare when Naito pinned Henare after a Destino.

A Block Matches:

Flip Gordon defeated Tiger Mask

Tiger Mask scored the first meaningful offense of the match. After trading holds, he hit a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. He applied a headscissors and slammed Flip’s face into the mat, before transitioning to a camel clutch. 
Tiger gave up the hold for some reason, allowing Flip to land some strikes, and a standing shooting star. Flip hit a cool springboard Sling Blade, before Tiger was able to connect with the double underhook superplex for a two count. 

Tiger used an armbar, but Flip was able to escape, and hit a Falcon Arrow. He missed a corkscrew moonsault, but connected with a rolling senton and another standing shooting star, before Tiger caught him in a cross armbreaker. Tiger followed with a double underhook powerbomb, and a Tombstone, before heading to the top. 

Tiger missed a top rope splash, leading to the finishing sequence. Flip landed on his feet out of a suplex attempt, and connected with a superkick on the mat, and another to Tiger as he sat prone on the top rope. Flip hit the Four Flippy Splash, and got the pin. 

The first few minutes were nothing to write home about, and the rest of the match was average. 

ACH Defeated YOH

This was a good match, but not anything that you need to go out of your way to see. 

They started with their version of the Ospreay/Ricochet sequence. It was good, but these guys obviously aren’t at that level. ACH played bully for several minutes, working over YOH’s neck. He used strikes, holds, and a bridging suplex pinfall attempt, all targeting the head and neck. 

YOH was able to come back, landing a double footstomp, and a neckbreaker, which earned him a nearfall. They did a cool series of spots near the ropes, which ended with YOH hitting a crossbody off the top. ACH rolled through, and hit a DVD for a nearfall. 

ACH went for a deadlift suplex, but started selling his bad shoulder, and gave it up. YOH took notice, and started working over the shoulder. He went for a swanton bomb, but ACH got his knees up. The crowd really got behind ACH at this point. He tore the tape off his shoulder, which got a big reaction, but YOH took advantage, and hit the superplex into a Falcon Arrow spot for a nearfall. 

They traded strikes, and ACH got the best of the exchange, as YOH took a flip bump off a lariat. ACH followed with the Soul Buster (package DDT), and picked up the pinfall victory. 

Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated Taiji Ishimori 

This was good, but if they had cut about three minutes of dead time out, it would have been great. They only went fifteen, but there were multiple countout teases, and some of the selling was too much. 

Ishimori jumped Kanemaru before the bell, landed some strikes, and a seated senton. He used a cravate, and landed blows to the back of the head, before the action spilled outside, and the match turned in Kanemaru’s favor. They brawled into the audience, and Kanemaru use a chair to choke Taiji. 

Back inside, it was Kanemaru’s turn to work the head and neck. He hit a draping DDT on Taiji, who bumped from the apron to the floor. They teased a countout, before Kanemaru continued his attack. Taiji missed a dropkick, but connected on a handspring into a kick. He followed with Ibushi’s Golden Triangle to the floor, and hit his sliding suplex. 

Kanemaru came back with a tornado DDT, leading to a double down. Taiji went for a superplex, but Kanemaru turned it into an implant DDT off the top. He followed with an inverted DDT, but Taiji was able to counter with the powerbomb lungblower, but could only get a two count from it. 

Taiji used a crossface, but Kanemaru was able to reach the ropes. Kanemaru grabbed Red Shoes, who took a bump to the floor. He spit the whiskey mist, and hit a brainbuster, but only got a two count, which came as a shock to the audience. 

Kanemaru came off the top into a Codebreaker, but as Taiji picked him up, Kanemaru small packaged him for the pin. I liked the zigs and zags at the end. 

BUSHI defeated Will Ospreay

This was not as good as most Ospreay matches, but only because they used this as part of telling a larger story. The idea is that Ospreay is exhausted, which I’m sure he is. As a result, he sold a lot here, and cut back on the spectacular offense a bit. It was still very good overall, and the crowd is into BUSHI as a part of the most over faction in the promotion. 

BUSHI hit a dropkick as Ospreay was being introduced, and he choked him with his ring gear. BUSHI wasted no time attacking Ospreay’s bad neck. Ospreay teased the Sasuke Special, but they both did their trademark poses. BUSHI continued his attack near the ropes, and they rolled to the floor, where BUSHI used a chair. 

Ospreay beat the count inside, and BUSHI used a headscissors. He followed with a dropkick to the back, and used an STF. Ospreay was able to hit a handspring knee strike, a 619, and a springboard clothesline, which earned a nearfall. 

BUSHI was back in control in short order, hitting a missile dropkick and double knees in the corner. Ospreay hit an enziguri, and a Sasuke Special. After a struggle on the floor, Ospreay hit a brainbuster, dropping BUSHI on the apron. Ospreay dignalled for the Storm Breaker, but BUSHI bumped Red Shoes, and sprayed Ospreay with the black mist. He used a backslide for a nearfall, but ate a kick on a follow up strike, allowing Ospreay ample time to wash the mist out of his eyes. 

Ospreay hit a superkick, and a lifting inverted DDT for a nearfall. The crowd began buzzing at this point.

Ospreay hit a Robinson Special, and went for the Oscutter, but BUSHI hit a backstabber, leading to a double down. BUSHI landed a Canadian Destroyer for a nearfall, then went up top, landed the MX, and got the pin. 

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors night 6 results: Takahashi vs. Lee

The 25th Best of the Super Juniors tournament continued Friday with Night Six’s B Block action, held at the Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium in Osaka. Here are the results.

Prelim Matches:

  • Shota Umino, Tomoyuki Oka & Tiger Mask defeated Yuya Uemura, Yota Tsuji & Flip Gordon when Umino tapped out Uemura with a Boston Crab
  • YOSHI-HASHI & YOH defeated Toa Henare & ACH when YOSHI-HASHI tapped out Henare with the Butterfly Lock
  • Minoru Suzuki & Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated Chase Owens & Taiji Ishimori when Suzuki pinned Owens after a Gotch Piledriver
  • BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito defeated Gedo & Will Ospreay when BUSHI pinned Gedo after an MX

B Block Matches:

Marty Scurll defeated Chris Sabin

This was a good outing for both guys. Sabin looked better than in his earlier tournament bouts, and they did a lot of cool cross-up and counter spots. 

They started with some crazy good chain wrestling sequences, with Sabin using something that looked like a La Magistral hip toss. They did some comedy, which worked well. Sabin went for a springboard DDT, but Scurll countered, and went to work on Sabin’s left arm. 

Sabin hit a DDT and got a couple of nearfalls with cradles. Scurll hit  Sunset Flip, but Sabin rolled through and landed a kick, and a Fisherman’s Suplex, getting another nearfall. Scurll slapped on a Surfboard, then stomped on both of Sabin’s surgically repaired knees. He hit an inverted brainbuster for a nearfall. 

Sabin got the best of an exchange ini the corner, and tied Scurll to the Tree of Woe for a dropkick. They traded shots on the apron, and Sabin shoved Scurll into the post, before hitting a flip dive to the floor. Sabin got a nearfall, and avoided the finger break spot. 

They traded strikes and counters. Scurll teased the Chicken Wing, while Sabin teased hitting All Hail Sabin. A sequence of strikes ended with Scurll taking a flip bump off a lariat, only to pop back up and hit Black Plague for the win. 

Ryusuke Taguchi defeated KUSHIDA

The ring entrances were longer than the match. They teased locking up for a bit, then their opening volley ended in a stalemate. They hit each other with stereo hip attacks, then KUSHIDA caught taguchi in a flying armbar. Taguchi turned it into a cradle attempt for a nearfall, then caught KUSHIDA jumping in with a front facelock, and small packaged him for the upset. 

I like the idea of doing a finish like this once in a while to sell the idea that matches can end at any point, and a Taguchi match is as good a time as any.

SHO defeated El Desperado

Desperado jumped SHO at the bell, and beat him all around ringside, including using a chair. They teased a countout, but SHO made it back inside, and sold the left leg in a big way. Desperado spent five minutes working the leg, until SHO hit a sweet dropkick, and a series of lariats. 

Desperado flipped SHO off, so SHO grabbed his arm and slapped on a cross armbreaker. He hit a baseball slide, but Desperado nailed him with a series of low dropkicks to the bad leg, reclaiming control. 

Desperado hit an Angle Slam for a nearfall, but SHO was able to backdrop out of a follow-up double underhook bomb. SHO hit a suplex, and a powerbomb lungblower for a nearfall. He went for another, but Desperado turned it inito a pinning combination for a nearfall. 

The finish saw Desperado miss a low blow, and eat a lariat and a Shock Arrow for the pin. 

These guys are good, but this was missing something, and SHO’s intermittent selling of his leg distracted me. 

Dragon Lee defeated Hiromu Takahashi

These are two of the best performers in the world, and they showed why here. 

They came out of the gate going a thousand miles an hour, then threw a changeup and had a prolonged exchange of slaps to the chest in the center of the ring. They teased a hurracanrana from the apron to the floor, but Hiromu powerbombed Lee on the apron instead. 

They brawled into the crowd, and Hiromu used a chair. Back inside, Hiromu played bully, and went for Lee’s mask. Lee threw some chops, but they established that Hiromu was the more powerful striker of the two. Hiromu used a Tarantula on the ropes, and followed with a wheelbarrow facebuster to the floor. He came off the apron into a dropkick, and the tide turned in favor of Lee.

Lee hit a Tope con Hilo, and followed with an Angel’s Wings for a nearfall. Now it was Lee’s turn to play bully, as the crowd heated up. He hit the slinshot dropkick in the corner, and taunted Hiromu with the Tranquilo pose. 
They traded cradles, then a series of suplexes. Hiromu hit a lariat, and Lee took a flip bump, leading to a double down near the ten minute mark. Lee used an armbar, but Hiromu reached the ropes. They teased a double footstomp in the corner, but Hiromu turned it into a suplex, then went outside. 

Lee hit a running dropkick over the top rope to the floor. How he avoided blowing his knee out, I don’t know. They teased a double countout, but Hiromu hit a suplex on the floor, and made it back inside, before pie-facing Red Shoes, stopping the count. He then landed a senton from the post to the floor. They teased a countout again, but both men beat the count. 

They exchanged strikes, and Lee hit a Frankensteiner. Hiromu countered with a Canadian Destroyer. Hiromu hit a series of elbow strikes, but Lee countered with Desnucadora for a close nearfall, as Hiromu was just able to reach the ropes. 

Lee charged in for an attack, but Hiromu suplexed him into the corner, then hit the Dynamite Plunger for a nearfall. They went up top, and Lee hit a double footstomp to the back off the top rope for a nearfall. Lee hit a standing Spanish Fly, which is go-to the move of the tournament for a lot of guys, for a nearfall. 

With Hiromu spent, Lee hit the Dragon Driver, and scored the pinfall. Excellent stuff. 

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors results: The A Block winner is decided

Today’s Best of the Super Juniors show in Osaka determined the winner of the A Block as the tournament begins to wind down. The results were:

Prelim matches —

– Yoshinobu Kanemaru & El Desperado defeated ACH & Volador Jr. when Kanemaru caught ACH with a flash pin. Desperado teased hitting Kanemaru with a chair, adding some tension to their match tomorrow.

– Ryusuke Taguchi, Juice Robinson & KUSHIDA defeated EVIL, BUSHI & SANADA when Taguchi pinned BUSHI with a la magistral cradle.

– Bad Luck Fale & Guerrillas of Destiny defeated War Machine & David Finlay after Fale hit the Grenade on Finlay.

– Yujiro Takahashi & Kenny Omega defeated Gedo & Kazuchika Okada when Takahashi pinned Gedo after hitting the Pimp Juice DDT.

Tournament results —

Jushin Thunder Liger defeated Taichi

This was more of a story-driven match than a match telling a story. The work itself was fine, but the storyline was dramatic enough to make things pretty interesting.

Taka Michinoku and El Desperado were out there to interfere early, and did so often in the first part of the match. They all beat up on Liger, with Taichi using the camera cord to choke him. Taichi continued to dominate the match, landing a superkick, but somehow Liger found a way to kick out.

Liger mounted a comeback, laying out Taichi with the shotei. Taichi threw the ref in Liger’s way, allowing all of Suzuki-gun to come in for a beatdown. The ref at this point was about to finally throw out the two instigators when, once again, Taichi threw Liger into the ref.

Using a pair of scissors, Taichi cut Liger’s mask and bodysuit, ripping it apart. Ryusuke Taguchi and KUSHIDA finally came in to even up the odds. Taichi went to use a steel chair, but Liger responded with the koppo kick, the shotei, and a brainbuster to pick up his first and only win in the tournament.

Liger cut a promo after the match, saying thanks to Taguchi and KUSHIDA he finally picked up a win. Next year without him, the junior heavyweight scene in the Best of the Super Juniors tournament will be even better. 

Taka Michinoku defeated Dragon Lee

This was pretty short. There wasn’t much to it, though what did go down was pretty good. Michinoku focused on the mask early, but Dragon Lee made a quick comeback. A lot of good back and forth and near falls took place towards the end. Michinoku landed the Michinoku Driver and pinned him, eliminating Lee from the tournament.

Marty Scurll defeated Ricochet

This was great, as the two meshed really well with one another and had a great back-and-forth match. The drama behind Scurll being Ricochet’s possible spoiler added to the match as well. It was probably the best match of the night.

Scurll jumped Ricochet at the bell, but Ricochet quickly came back and took him out with a Fosbury flop to the floor. He went to the top rope, but Scurll caught him with the chickenwing, only for Ricochet to escape.

Scurll worked over Ricochet with a couple of surfboards, but Ricochet bounced back with a 619 and a flying uppercut. Scurll landed a version of Adam Cole’s Last Shot, though Ricochet was able to kick out.

Ricochet fired back with some great kicks that took out Scurll. He went for a shooting star press, but Scurll got his knees up and landed a piledriver, then another one. He tried for a superkick, then Ricochet tagged him with one of his own.

He went for a reverse suplex, but Scurll transitioned around. Ricochet tried to roll him up into a bridge, but Scurll trapped him in the chickenwing and despite putting up a fight, Ricochet tapped out. That puts him out of the tournament, with the winner of the main event advancing to the finals.

Will Ospreay defeated Hiromu Takahashi

I don’t think this was a complete blow-away match, but this was still great with some crazy spots.

Ospreay started off hot, hitting a huge suicide dive and dropkicking Takahashi into a bunch of empty chairs in the crowd. Takahashi soon fired back with a sunset flip bomb to the floor.

Takahashi worked over Ospreay’s leg, but Ospreay fired back with a shooting star press and a corkscrew press for a near fall. They both countered their opponent’s finishing attempts, with Takahashi landing two German suplexes after Ospreay attempted the OsCutter.

Ospreay hit a shooting star press to the floor, then tried to follow with a Phoenix splash in the ring, but Takahashi got his knees up. Ospreay hit a Canadian Destroyer DDT and the imploding 450 splash — but Takahashi kicked out. The OsCutter then sent him to the tournament finals.

Ospreay cut a promo. He said two weeks ago when he beat Ricochet he said he would make it to the finals. The butterflies and nerves are gone, and while the Best of the Super Juniors is prestigious, he wants to make it even more so.

He is the champion of his block and he will challenge all comers. It doesn’t matter who the B Block champion is, he will become a back-to-back Best of the Super Juniors winner.

Tournament standings —

Block A ends with Will Ospreay earning ten points. Dragon Lee, Ricochet, Taichi, Hiromu Takahashi, and Marty Scurll finished with eight points. Taka Michinoku jumped up to four points, and Jushin Thunder Liger scored two points in his final Best of the Super Juniors tournament.

Everyone in Block B has six points heading into tomorrow. Whoever loses their matches on tomorrow’s show will be eliminated, and whoever wins will probably rely on tiebreakers to win their block.

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors results: Taguchi vs. KUSHIDA

NJPW was back at Korakuen Hall this morning as we head through the last few shows before the Best of the Super Juniors finals on June 3rd. Here are the results:

– Taka Michinoku & Taichi defeated Syota Umino & Dragon Lee when Michinoku submitted Umino with a crossface.

– EVIL & SANADA defeated Hirai Kawato & Ricochet when EVIL submitted Kawato.

– War Machine & David Finlay defeated Guerrillas of Destiny & Yujiro Takahashi when Raymond Rowe pinned Tama Tonga after an assisted powerslam by Hanson.

– Marty Scurll, Kenny Omega & Bad Luck Fale defeated Gedo, Will Ospreay & Kazuchika Okada when Scurll submitted Gedo with the chickenwing.

Tiger Mask defeated El Desperado

Desperado controlled a lot of the match, attacking Tiger Mask’s left leg and working on it extensively. Tiger Mask tried to muster a comeback but was limited on what he could do. Out of nowhere, he hit a Tiger suplex and bridged it for the win. This was a good little match that told a nice story.

Tiger Mask wasn’t done, motioning that he wanted to remove Desperado’s mask as he threw him back in the ring. But being a good guy, he decided not to go down that road and left him laying instead.

BUSHI defeated Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Kanemaru jumped BUSHI before he even entered the ring. They brawled into the crowd where BUSHI stunned Kanemaru, giving him enough time to climb onto an arena entryway and launch with a big crossbody, wiping out both Kanemaru and Taka Michinoku.

A good back and forth match followed. Kanemaru has like zero charisma to speak of, but he’s good at being intense.

BUSHI took out Michinoku with a suicide dive. Kanemaru used the opportunity to grab the whiskey bottle Suzuki-gun has been using on this tour to blind BUSHI, but instead BUSHI low blowed him (the ref, of course, was distracted) allowing him to soon follow with the MX for the win.

Volador Jr. defeated ACH

This was a very good, fast-paced match. Both guys looked great and worked well with one another, leading to a great match that met my expectations going in.

Volador outed himself as the heel early, taking a cheap shot after shaking hands with ACH. High-paced action followed. Volador unleashed a giant tope con hilo that looked like it connected more with the young lions protecting the crowd than ACH himself.

ACH soon followed with five suicide dives that sent Volador further into the crowd each time he did it. ACH hit a giant superplex to the floor and tried to go to the top rope once more, but Volador cut him off and instead hit the super rana off the top rope for the win.

KUSHIDA defeated Ryusuke Taguchi

This was such a great match. It was two guys going out there and giving it their all. The work early was good and pretty fast paced; a lot of cool dives and submission work as well. Taguchi has rapidly evolved into one of the more reliable great workers in this division over the last year and KUSHIDA is clearly one of the best workers in the world right now.

After starting slow with some chain wrestling, KUSHIDA started to work on Taguchi’s arm. They got up and fast-paced action followed. Taguchi went to the apron and flew off with a hip attack, but KUSHIDA grabbed him in mid-air, grabbing the bum arm and applying an armbar.

Taguchi started working on KUSHIDA’s right leg as the action continued. KUSHIDA cut him off after a hip attack attempt, rolled over, and actually landed the Dodon. When Taguchi tried to mount a comeback again, KUSHIDA caught him with an armbar. They countered each other with many submission attempts until KUSHIDA finally grounded Taguchi with a figure four leglock.

They continued fighting until Taguchi landed a straight punch to the gut, sending KUSHIDA reeling. KUSHIDA tried to go for his new finish — the move previously known as God’s Last Gift (which is now called Back to the Future) — but Taguchi took him down with the Kimura and focused on KUSHIDA’s arm. Taguchi nailed the Dodon, but KUSHIDA kicked out.

He followed with a running hip toss, but KUSHIDA kicked out of that as well. Taguchi sunk in the ankle lock. KUSHIDA struggled to escape, then managed to do so, and after some wrangling sunk in the hoverboard lock. Taguchi kept trying to escape, but KUSHIDA got up and landed the Back to the Future for the win.

KUSHIDA cut a promo after the match, giving props to Taguchi as he raised his hand in a sign of respect.

Standings —

Block A has Will Ospreay, Dragon Lee, Ricochet, Taichi, and Hiromu Takahashi all tied with eight points. Marty Scurll (six points), Taka Michinoku (two points), and Jushin Thunder Liger (zero) are out of contention.

Everyone in the B Block has six points, meaning anyone can walk out of the June 1st show as the winner of the block. A lot of variables are in play, to say the least.