We’ve got a double issue this week of the Observer with the full rundown of Harold Meij being out in New Japan, WWE’s social media policy as it relates to talent, and extensive G-1 coverage.
Our lead story looks at the Harold Meij era of New Japan, how he got there, the turmoil behind-the-scenes, why he’s leaving, his last words to his fan club, why the guy who handled running a wrestling company during a pandemic is out while in the pandemic and a lot of behind-the-scenes stories regarding New Japan and AEW never making a deal, and whether this can change things, and what the key issues are. The changes he made to the company, the business record and issues in dealing with talent and others and the inherent issues of a non-Japanese person in charge of a major Japanese company. This is the most inside version of what happened there since 2018 and from people who know the situation the best.
Also in this issue:
WWE’s latest when it comes to talent and social media, WWE policy, Andrew Yang and why this could be the worst time to make these decisions.
WWE Clash of Champions, NXT Takeover, Hell in a Cell, the COVID issues in AEW & WWE and how they spread, plus match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results.
G1 Climax tournament, with standings, best matches, behind-the-scenes,why crowds aren’t quick to sell out, plus match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results of every show.
XFL start, changes in WWE tapings and why 205 Live will be taped with NXT ad not Smackdown, we look at declines in WWE interest and reasons why WWE draft dates, Reigns vs. Rock, Reigns talks C.M. Punk, new Dwayne Johnson TV show looked at, new WWE signings, update on WWE injuries, one of the top college wrestlers already publicly talking about going to WWE, more on TV ratings in U.S. and Canada, former TNA champion talks how close he came to joining WWE, Cena starring in new movie, Zayn talks politics, Rusev talks problems with WWE creative, update on Raw Underground, where tribal chief comes from, WWE market value and the most watched shows on WWE Network over the past week.
UFC 253, with business notes, the main themes of the show plus match-by-match coverage and poll results.
The treatment of women in pro wrestling with notes from a recent BBC article with thoughts from several women involved.
87th anniversary show of CMLL, and the plight of Lucha Libre with no fans.
Jerry Lawler 50th anniversary show.
2020 Hall of Fame ballot in each category, with the top candidate, last year’s highest that haven’t gotten in, as well as a list of those who have been elected in the past five years.
Smackdown and AEW ratings based on the same opposition, as well as network vs. cable when it comes to other sports.
Results of all the major pro wrestling events around the world over the past week.
ORDERING INFO: Order the print Wrestling Observer right now and get it delivered via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to [email protected] or by going to www.paypal.com directing funds to [email protected].
Rates in the United States are $14.50 for 4 issues, $35.50 for 12, $70 for 24, $116 for 40 and $149.50 for 52.
In Canada and Mexico, the rates are $16 for 4, $27 for 8, $38.50 for 12, $76 for 24, $126 for 40 and $162.50 for 52.
For the rest of the world, rates are $18 for 4, $48.50 for 12, $93 for 24, $155 for 40 and $201.50 for 52.
If you order by mail with a check, cash or money order to P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228, you can get $1 off in every price range.
MONDAY NEWS UPDATE
Bryan and I will be back tonight for Wrestling Observer Radio talking Takeover, UFC, Impact and all kinds of other stuff. You can send questions to the show to [email protected]
A GoFundMe has been set up for the family of Jim Valley, who has been battling hard against a series of devastating illnesses.Thanks to people here we’ve raised more than $31,000 in less than two days. Special mention to both Chris Jericho and Tony Khan for their generous donations here, and not limited to here, and this is something both have done many times for various cases of people in and around wrestling that they don’t often get credit for.
The scheduled Kamaru Usman vs. Gilbert Burns fight on 12/12 is being moved back to early 2021. Usman needs more time to get ready.
No official update on the conditions of Finn Balor or Kyle O’Reilly coming out of last night’s match. Balor was feared to have suffered a broken jaw. WWE reported O’Reilly had some broken teeth.
Zeus beat Kento Miyahara earlier today to win the Champion Carnival tournament.
Sarah Stock, the former Dark Angel, was arrested on Sunday in Evansville according to PWInsider on charges of aggravated battery, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and public intoxication with alcohol and booked at 4:25 a.m. Sunday morning. She has been released. Stock has been traveling around the country since she was released by WWE where she was working as a coach at the Performance Center.
Scott Norton underwent surgery for a second knee replacement in Houston.
WWE
With the Kansas City Chiefs vs. New England Patriots game airing on CBS along with ESPN’s Atlanta Falcon vs. Green Bay Packers game head-to-head, Raw has the toughest competition in a long time for any one night. Thus far the show has The Street Profits & Drew McIntyre vs Randy Orton & Dolph Ziggler & Bobby Roode, Shayna Baszler & Nia Jax will have the tag title match scheduled for the last PPV against Ruby Riott & Liv Morgan and Bray Wyatt returns to Raw for a confrontation with Kevin Owens. There is also a New York Yankees vs. Tampa Bay Devil Rays baseball playoff game. There is no post-PPV bump. to rely on this week nor are they bringing back stars from the past.
Bayley has now hit 500 days as Smackdown women’s champion.
NXT Takeover didn’t trend last night on Google. The Takeovers almost never do, and on a football Sunday, it was almost a lock that it wouldn’t.
AEW
Trent is attempting to trademark the name Trent Baretta.
MISCELLANEOUS
G-1 continues tomorrow at 5:30 a.m. from Hiroshima:
Yota Tsuji vs. Yuya Uemura
Hirooki Goto vs. Toru Yano
Sanada vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
Evil vs. Juice Robinson
Tetsuya Naito vs Yoshi-Hashi
Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. KENTA
G-1 on Wednesday at 3 a.m. Eastern from Hiroshima:
Tsuji vs.Gabriek Kidd
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Yujiro Takahashi
Kazuchika Okada vs. Jeff Cobb
Will Ospreay vs. Minoru Suzuki
Jay White vs. Taichi
Shingo Takagi vs. Kota Ibushi
Major League Wrestling has made a deal with the Sports Channel Network (Ch. 266 on Freeview) for broadcast in the U.K. and Ireland.
Alex Marvez has compiled a book that lists every match of Chris Jericho’s 30-year-career.
An attempt to bring Shoot Pro Wrestling as a new style is at 1:01:30. SPW is a hybrid-wrestling show that showcases a variety of pro wrestling styles, most ESPECIALLY shoot-style. It was done with new, mostly unknown talent and co-promoted with local promotion Primos Premier Pro-Wrestling.
Luc C. Vu, who drove the vehicle that ran into Matt Palacios (Matt Travis) pleaded guilty to reckless driving, failure to exercise due car, causing serious injury and failure to yield to a bicycle, in a report by PWInsider. His driver’s license was suspended for six months and he was fined $250. That seems way too light for a manslaughter case.
Masked Republic’s Expo Lucha convention and expo takes place streaming on 10/10 at 1 p.m. Eastern. There will be six hours of free content on The Expo Lucha Facebook page, the Lucha Central YouTube channel and Masked Republic Twitch channel. They will air Penta & Fenix & Mr. Aguila vs. Brian Cage & TJP & Jack Evans, with Lita managing Aguila as she did in her first WWE gig. There will also be an interview with Konnan.
Impact for tomorrow night:
Tommy Dreamer vs Brian Myers
Kiera Hogan & Tasha Steelz vs. Taya & Rosemary
Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley vs. Ace Austin & Mad Man Fulton
Dragon Gate’s Korakuen Hall show airs live on Wednesday. The main event is Yamato & Kzy & Ben K & Kota M<inoura of Dragon Gate vs. R.E.D. of Eita & BxB Hulk & Kota Minoura & Kai.
XICW ran its 20th anniversary show and 300th show overall on Pontiac, MI last night: Soutalker b LJ Lawrence, El Ridiculoso b Willie Watts, Jumai Kyng b Mongo, Jumai Kyng b Billy Ray Daniels, TJ Meyer b Jumai Kyng, Justin Dream b TJ Meyer, Justin Dream b Mad Man Fulton, Mysterious Movado b Sam Beale, Rhino & Heath b DBA & Jaimy Coxxx to win tag titles, The Hallow b The Purge, Dread King Logan b Jake Crist, DBA NC Mr. Insanity in a cage match, Aaron Orion & Tommy Vendetta & Jack Price & Isiah Broner b Malcolm Monroe II & Dre Jacobs & Adam Wick & Alex Weir in a War Games match (thanks to Leonard Brand)
CWE on 12/4 in Winnipeg at Rookies Sports Bar with attendance limited to 100 people and masks recommended.
We’ve got a double issue this week of the Observer with the full rundown of Harold Meij being out in New Japan, WWE’s social media policy as it relates to talent, and extensive G-1 coverage.
Our lead story looks at the Harold Meij era of New Japan, how he got there, the turmoil behind-the-scenes, why he’s leaving, his last words to his fan club, why the guy who handled running a wrestling company during a pandemic is out while in the pandemic and a lot of behind-the-scenes stories regarding New Japan and AEW never making a deal, and whether this can change things, and what the key issues are. The changes he made to the company, the business record and issues in dealing with talent and others and the inherent issues of a non-Japanese person in charge of a major Japanese company. This is the most inside version of what happened there since 2018 and from people who know the situation the best.
Also in this issue:
WWE’s latest when it comes to talent and social media, WWE policy, Andrew Yang and why this could be the worst time to make these decisions.
WWE Clash of Champions, NXT Takeover, Hell in a Cell, the COVID issues in AEW & WWE and how they spread, plus match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results.
G1 Climax tournament, with standings, best matches, behind-the-scenes,why crowds aren’t quick to sell out, plus match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results of every show.
XFL start, changes in WWE tapings and why 205 Live will be taped with NXT ad not Smackdown, we look at declines in WWE interest and reasons why WWE draft dates, Reigns vs. Rock, Reigns talks C.M. Punk, new Dwayne Johnson TV show looked at, new WWE signings, update on WWE injuries, one of the top college wrestlers already publicly talking about going to WWE, more on TV ratings in U.S. and Canada, former TNA champion talks how close he came to joining WWE, Cena starring in new movie, Zayn talks politics, Rusev talks problems with WWE creative, update on Raw Underground, where tribal chief comes from, WWE market value and the most watched shows on WWE Network over the past week.
UFC 253, with business notes, the main themes of the show plus match-by-match coverage and poll results.
The treatment of women in pro wrestling with notes from a recent BBC article with thoughts from several women involved.
87th anniversary show of CMLL, and the plight of Lucha Libre with no fans.
Jerry Lawler 50th anniversary show.
2020 Hall of Fame ballot in each category, with the top candidate, last year’s highest that haven’t gotten in, as well as a list of those who have been elected in the past five years.
Smackdown and AEW ratings based on the same opposition, as well as network vs. cable when it comes to other sports.
Results of all the major pro wrestling events around the world over the past week.
ORDERING INFO: Order the print Wrestling Observer right now and get it delivered via mail, by sending your name, address, Visa or Master Card number and an expiration date to [email protected] or by going to www.paypal.com directing funds to [email protected].
Rates in the United States are $14.50 for 4 issues, $35.50 for 12, $70 for 24, $116 for 40 and $149.50 for 52.
In Canada and Mexico, the rates are $16 for 4, $27 for 8, $38.50 for 12, $76 for 24, $126 for 40 and $162.50 for 52.
For the rest of the world, rates are $18 for 4, $48.50 for 12, $93 for 24, $155 for 40 and $201.50 for 52.
If you order by mail with a check, cash or money order to P.O. Box 1228, Campbell, CA 95009-1228, you can get $1 off in every price range.
SUNDAY NEWS UPDATE
Bryan and I will be back tonight for Wrestling Observer Radio talking Takeover, UFC, Impact and all kinds of other stuff. You can send questions to the show to [email protected]. Garrett Gonzalez and I did a show yesterday with Mike Tenay talking news and the Hall of Fame. This is probably the best received show we’ve done in a long time and as good a wrestling history show as you’ll hear anywhere. We will also have a second show that will be up this coming Friday.
Thanks to everyone who has ordered my new 1997 Wrestling Observer Yearbook. The success in week one has been such that I’d think it’s a lock there will be a second one released. Right now the book is No. 1 among wrestling books on Amazon as well as No. 1 for kindle on Amazon. You can get the physical book at amazon in the U.S.or the kindle version or physical book in the U.K. at www.WrestlingObserverBook.com
Notes on tonight’s NXT Takeover and odds are from www.BetOnline.ag The show will be from the Performance Center, now called the Capitol Wrestling Center. There will be 100 fans at the show. It will also be the first time an NXT show is on PPV, priced at $54.99, so they are pricing their show more expensively than AEW, ROH or Impact do, but less than UFC does..
We have polls up today for NXT Takeover, thumbs up, down or middle, best and worst match to [email protected] as well as for Thursday’s G-1 show in Niigata and tomorrow’s G-1 show.
Finn Balor vs. Kyle O’Reilly for the NXT title. This would not surprise me to be among the best WWE matches of the year given the talent involved and the nature of the show. Balor is listed as a -700 favorite.
Io Shirai vs. Candice LeRae for the women’s title. They are coming off a great match at a prior Takeover before Shirai was champion. Shirai is the -170 favorite to retain.
Damien Priest vs. Johnny Gargano for the North America title. This also looks like a great match on paper with Priest as a -160 favorite.
Santos Escobar defends the cruiserweight title against Isaiah Scott. Also looks good on paper with Escobar a -180 favorite.
Velveteen Dream vs. Kushida – Dream is listed as a -150 favorite.
This is a very strong show on paper. Not sure what the interest level will be for NXT on a standalone Sunday against the NFL, but that was the call they made.
Mikey Whipwreck noted that Tracy Smothers, who has been battling cancer for some time, is now hospitalized with heart related issues. Best of luck to Smothers. He was one of the real underrated wrestlers of the 90s.
Kento Miyahara vs. Zeus in the finals of the All Japan Champion Carnival tournament takes place tomorrow morning from Korakuen Hall in Tokyo.
Kaito Kiyomiya beat Go Shiozaki earlier today to advance to the finals of Pro Wrestling NOAH’s N-1 tournament which takes place on 10/11 in Osaka. He will face Katsuhiko Nakajima, who beat Naomichi Marufuji to win the B block. The winner of the Carnival will then face Go Shiozaki for the Triple Crown title.
WWE
With the Kansas City Chiefs vs. New England Patriots game airing tomorrow night on CBS along with ESPN’s Atlanta Falcon vs. Green Bay Packers game head-to-head, tomorrow will actually be even tougher competition for Raw than last week. There is also a New York Yankees vs. Tampa Bay Devil Rays baseball playoff game. There is no post-PPV bump. to rely on this week nor will anything short of Steve Austin, Undertaker, Brock Lesnar or Ronda Rousey be an effective hot shot after playing the big nostalgia card last week.
WWE pulled Big Show from the Cauliflower Alley Club’s virtual convention on FITE TV to raise money for wrestlers in need to sell the injuries from Monday. Which is notable with Shawn Michaels on Wednesday of this past week not selling them nor pulled. Mark Henry replaced him.
UFC
Alejandro Perez tested positive for COVID ad he’s out of his fight wth Thomas Almeida that was scheduled for 10/10. The UFC is looking for a new opponent for Almeida.
Muslim Salikhov has pulled out of his 10/17 fight with Claudio Silva. No reason was given. James Krause will now face Silva on that show.
MISCELLANEOUS
G-1 tomorrow morning at 6 a.m. on New Japan World from Takamatsu
Gabriel Kidd vs. Yuya Uemura
Shingo Takagi vs. Yujiro Takahashi
Jay White vs. Jeff Cobb
Kazuchika Okada vs. Minoru Suzuki
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Taichi
Will Ospreay vs. Kota Ibushi
A really great look at modern candidates, the WON Hall of Fame, and how people don’t get credit for their work in smaller promotions It also makes a case for where modern people should rank.
This was not a big week for mainstream interest in combat sports given everything with the president, NBA playoffs, football in general and such. The only thing all week that trended was Holly Holm yesterday off the UFC show with 200,000 for the No. 4 position on the day.
Stardom ran its big PPV show in Japan yesterday in Yokohama: AZM b Starlight Kid to keep the High Speed title, Mira Shirakawa b Hanan, Riho & Saya Iida b Sumire Natsu & Yuma Manase, Natsupoi (Natsumi Maki b Death Yama-San, Bea Priestley b Momo Watanabe to win the vacant SWA title, Saki Kashima & Natsuko Tora b Jungle Kyona & Konami meaning the Tokyo Cyber Squad must disband, Utami Hayashishita & Saya Kamitani b Maika & Himeka to keep the Goddesses of Stardom tag titles, Giulia b Tam Nakano to keep the Wonder of Stardom title, Mayu Iwatani b Syuri to keep the World of Stardom title (thanks to Shannon Walsh)
CWE from Friday night in Winnipeg: Shaun Martens b Cliff Corleone to keep the Grand championship, EZ Ryder b Mercury in a Tequila Sunrise match (both had to get wasted on tequila before the match started, which sounds perfectly responsible), Sammy Peppers b Scott Ripley, Bobby Schink b Chad Daniels, Roy Cheeks b Bryce Bentley, Mentallo b Danny Duggan, Johnny Malibu b Adam Knight, Mike Mission & Tyler James & Kevy Chevy b Dick Blood & Jude Dawkins & Adren Burton in a fan bring the weapons match, AJ Sanchez & Kevin O’Doyle b Bobby Collins & Rob Stardom in a no DQ match to win the CWE tag team titles. Next show is 10/17 in Glastone, Manitoba. CWE champion Vincent and jr. champion Jimmy Jacobs have both been stripped of their titles since they can’t get into the country due to COVID. They will get title shots to win them back when the situation changes. The CWE title will be decided in an eight-man tournament on 11/6 in Winnipeg. An announcement will be made in the future regarding how the jr. title vacancy will be filled.
The UWN’s PPV show on Tuesday night has D’Angelo Dinero & Watts vs. Zicky Dice and a mystery partner, Bryan Idol vs Levi Shapiro and Caster Show vs. Chris Dickinson.’
Grant Zwarych is selling his collection of Stampede Wrestling programs from the 80s that include stuff with Owen Hart, Jushin Liger (as Keiichi Yamada), Bret Hart, Chris Benoit, Hiroshi Hase, Dynamite Kid, Davey Boy Smith, Bran Pillman, The Stomper, Toshiaki Kawada, Shinya Hashimoto and many others at [email protected]
All Japan Pro Wrestling closed out their annual Champion Carnival round robin tournament on April 29th, wrapping an 18-day tour that pitted 18 of their best talents, divided into two blocks, against each other, racing for points and a shot at the prestigious Triple Crown Championship, currently held by Kento Miyahara, a 30-year-old unsung genius of wrestling.
2018’s tourney gathered the attention of many when All Japan brought in Pro Wrestling NOAH’s Naomichi Marufuji, who would go on to win the Carnival; and then-Dragon Gate wrestler Shingo Takagi. Both would help expose the high level of talent in the promotion to new fans of Japanese wrestling or All Japan’s lapsed fans that had been away since the talent exodus or inception of NOAH.
I had previous experience following the G1 Climax, the Best of the Super Juniors and even TNA’s World Title series, and this year, I embarked on watching my first CC tournament. I have been checking in and out of All Japan for about two years, never following a full tour, so I came in with a clean slate, not knowing much of how they planned out their tours, nor being fully familiar with the roster.
The Format: Positives and Negatives
My first impression of AJPW was how they seemed to keep the work inside the ring to the most basic use of psychology and wrestling moves, yet enhance everything with intensity, selling, and playing to the crowd. It’s like people say, “the little things”, but when you see for the first time how a young wrestler like Yusuke Okada fiercely applies a Boston Crab, you will not stop questioning when a top wrestler submits to a move that we have been conditioned to see as a rest hold. Another example: you do not question the 49-year-old Takao Omori’s offense.
The tournament was not different from other round robin tournaments in Japan. They start with strong shows in Tokyo and as they start touring the country, you have ups and downs because eventually the talent at the bottom of the totem pole must face each other. Furthermore, the points game was slightly more straightforward with having a couple of guys that all will go to the block finals. Thus, many matches lacked story and were just there for points.
In a way, the straight forwardness of stacking up points was a detriment as there weren’t many stories going on along with the tournament. I can pretend that Jake Lee and Nomura are fighting to show that they are the future, or that Aoki and Suwama are fighting to show that they still belong, but at the end of the day, I got nothing due to the lack of promos, commentary, or build to any match in particular. I recall that only one show had post-fight promos and even then, they were basic promos with a “You’re good, but I was better” formula to all of them.I don’t fully blame AJPW. For all I know, I was the one that completely failed to find such stories.
Point stacking became predictable once I start analyzing the numbers and looking at the future cards. I’m not saying predictability is a bad thing, but without stories and the uncertainty of points, I ended up watching the shows for the pure enjoyment of wrestling and in-ring performance, and so my interest in some wrestlers went up or down.
Another thing I noticed, which worked well sometimes and not on other occasions, was how tag matches were booked for the wrestlers who had days off. For anyone familiar with the G1 Climax, every time a wrestler has a day off from the tournament, they have a tag match that builds up their upcoming match. However, All Japan doesn’t follow a block per day program. They mix it up, so it’s not as simple to build such matches, nor do they try sometimes as we saw with some matches where tomorrow’s match pairing were a tag team today. It’s not really a detriment to not have those previews, but I do think it adds something to the match if there is a little bit of teasing.
That being said, the Champion Carnival does have many positives. The in-ring work was quite enjoyable with at least one or two strong matches per show. The undercard was mostly the same, but always managed to entertain me with a really strong group of up and comers mixing it up with talented veterans. Most shows ran around two hours with an intermission in the middle, so it became a pleasant and easy to watch routine every morning for me. Not a day went on where I felt I had wasted my time as there was always a lasting impression by someone. As usual with these tournaments, we always end up underestimating the blocks that look weak on paper.
As the tournament went on, I also started to find my favorite wrestlers. I was pleasantly surprised by some of the names, some who I never thought I would care for (hint: former WWE wrestlers). To a point, I was also brought down from the clouds on some who I had high hopes on.
Block A Participants
Kento Miyahara
He is the All Japan “Ace”. There isn’t much to say about Miyahara other than his performance throughout the tournament was at a high level. He was constantly bringing out the best of his opponents, working hard during his off days, and straight up carrying this promotion. I expected Kento to have a strong run in his block, but with him being the champion, I surely did not expect for him to win at the end with the idea he could have set up several contenders that way. It speaks loudly that he went in and won the whole thing.
As mentioned, his losses came to Ishikawa, Zeus, and yes, Valletta, two men that are credible contenders, the former already being given his title shot as of this writing. I don’t expect Valletta to get his shot, especially with the idea of having a dirty tactics match in the main event, so it would have been nice for someone else to get the rub.
Match Recommendations:
– Zeus (4/9)
– Shuji Ishikawa (4/14)
– Ryoji Sai (4/24)
– Yuji Okabayashi (4/25)
Zeus
If Miyahara was the tournament MVP, Zeus, a jacked-up younger Tomohiro Ishii, was the best worker of the tournament. This man’s intensity in the ring has no equal in All Japan; if he was lacking, he would simply hide it with the sound of his knife edge chops. Throughout the tournament, Kento would take you on a trip with his matches. Meanwhile, Zeus was a straight destruction derby at 60 mph, and just like that, he became one of my highlights every time his name popped up on the tournament’s card.
Much to my disappointment, Zeus had four losses, leaving him out of contention at the end. But, the wins and losses were the perfect balance to keep him strong. He lost against top guys like Okabayashi and Ishikawa, and sure, he lost to Yuma and Sai, but he defeated Miyahara to make up for that. His performances alone should get him a title shot or I’ll riot.
Match Recommendations:
– Kento Miyahara (4/9)
– Dylan James (4/13)
– Ryoji Sai (4/14)
– Shuji Ishikawa (4/25)
Shuji Ishikawa
At 43 years old, Ishikawa was the oldest man in the tournament. He is the current AJPW Tag Team Champion along with Suwama, also the only two men that have won the Champion Carnival in the past that competed this year. He is a former Triple Crown Champion, and ever since announcing he had signed exclusively with AJPW, we have been counting the days until he recaptures that championship. If anything else, it made him a top contender to win the 2019 Champion Carnival.
Ishikawa’s win/loss record was quite similar to Miyahara in that he lost against the other top guys in the block, and one time limit draw with Sai numerically cost him the block. In addition, he defeated Kento, earning him a title shot. If not for the loss against Valletta, I’d say he had the strongest record in the tournament.
My one complaint was the hint he dropped right before the tournament began about revealing a new finishing move he had been working with his DDT friend, Kota Ibushi. Granted we saw him do Kamigoye, but it was nothing that lived up to the tease.
Match Recommendations:
– Yuji Okabayashi (4/4)
– Kento Miyahara (4/14)
– Zeus (4/25)
Dylan James
Dylan James is a name I didn’t know much about coming in to the Carnival. I had heard his name around Zero1, but that was about it. My first impression was that he is built like a bull and can go. He could still work with his performance side of matches as his facial expressions and selling have to get beat out of him. If he were to improve that area, he could explode as a big star outside of Japan.
James’ tournament was strong with losses coming against Zeus, Miyahara, and the points spoiler of the block finals, Atsushi Aoki. The match that ended up making the most noise for him was his 30 minute time limit draw with Yuji Okabayashi. It was a match so stiff and in a style that would make no rational sense to go 30 minutes. Yet, they did and paid the toll, especially James who sported a black eye for the rest of the tournament. Dylan’s gimmick and style is that of a heel, but because of that performance, fans saw him as a total babyface as the tournament came to an end.
Match Recommendations:
– Kento Miyahara (4/11)
– Zeus (4/13)
– Yuji Okabayashi (4/20)
Yuji Okabayashi
Representing Big Japan Wrestling, Okabayashi is not unfamiliar to All Japan as of late, but now we had a chance to see him mix it up with a wider range of wrestlers. Okabayashi’s style is that of a strong style brawler, a super hoss whose chops are on par with Zeus or WALTER. He came in as one of the top contenders of his block given the reception he received after his AJPW Tag Team Championship run with Daisuke Sekimoto.
Okabayashi had his epic time limit draw with Dylan James, arguably the best, or most newsworthy, match of the tournament. He also had three losses including a strong one against Miyahara that no one would think ill of. However, the others were to Sai and Valletta, the latter once again playing spoiler to the top guys. Similar to Zeus, his performance throughout the tournament should give him the opening to return and make big challenges in the future.
Match Recommendations:
– Shuji Ishikawa (4/4)
– Dylan James (4/20)
– Kento Miyahara (4/25)
Atsushi Aoki
Aoki was an interesting story as he wasn’t planned for the Carnival, but came in as a late replacement for the injured Kengo Mashino. He also was the smallest man in the tournament at 5’7″. He wasn’t the oldest man, but is up there with Suwama and Ishikawa. He was someone that there was no point in getting invested in, but boy, was I wrong as he ended being one of my favorite wrestlers.
Aoki was the one technician from Block A and positioned in the ‘Hoss Block’, giving him a good number of interesting match-ups. His role in the tournament was that of spoiler to Dylan James, and one of the guys that adjusted points in the block with wins ove Yuma, Valletta, and Sai who needed to be kept under the top contenders. Aoki closed the tournament earning a Junior Heavyweight title shot against Koji Iwamoto.
Match Recommendations:
– Kento Miyahara (4/4)
– Yuma Aoyagi (4/16)
Ryoji Sai
Sai is a 19 year old veteran that has mostly worked for Zero1, and after being inactive for some time after a run with NOAH, he started working with AJPW a couple of years ago. He is a great technician, a strong striker, and a unique character that still feels like an outsider. Sai was not positioned as a contender, but was there to give everyone a good match.
His tournament was interesting as he wasn’t working the filler tag matches and his matches were not being talked about much. He was a guy that I kept forgetting was in it until I saw him come out for a touney match. His role was being the spoiler of the top guys as he managed to get wins over Okabayashi, Zeus, Valletta, and a great time limit draw with Ishikawa. He is a guy that given the performance, I would want to see booked more often and turned into a good contender to bring the younger Jake Lee, Nomura, and Yuma up to their next level.
Match Recommendations:
– Shuji Ishikawa (4/7)
– Zeus (4/14)
– Ryoji Sai (4/24)
Yuma Aoyagi
Everyone likes to talk about Kento, Lee, and Nomura as the future of AJPW, but they fail to consider what Yuma brings to the table. He is only 23 and is already becoming a fan favorite with his charisma and flashy wrestling style. He was not a contender to win the whole thing, especially in his block, but with his quick rise, we were not wrong to believe that he was out there to raise his stock.
Aoyagi’s performance was good with his biggest win over Zeus, but he ended up falling to the top four men of the block. The best thing I saw of Yuma were his tag matches along with Yoshitatsu, becoming credible contenders to chase the tag team titles as they go on. Yuma was a guy that played best when he faced guys like Miyahara or Aoki where he wasn’t the babyface in peril.
Recommended Matches:
– Shuji Ishikawa (4/13)
– Atsushi Aoki (4/16)
– Kento Miyahara (4/17)
Gianni Valletta
Born in Malta, Valletta had to move to the United Kingdom to become a wrestler and ever since, he had only been a top wrestler in British Empire Wrestling. He came to AJPW last year and had a bad Real World Tag League tournament along with TAJIRI. His gimmick is yet another copy of Bruiser Brody, and if you know Joe Doering, you know that AJPW still loves those gimmicks which is the only reason I can think that Akiyama kept him close.
Valletta’s matches were all about brawling and cheating, and so, he was the foil to the top contenders as they could lose to low blows and chain shots and stay strong. He had wins over Kento, Ishikawa, and Okabayashi. Valletta was arguably the weakest wrestler of the tournament with the worst matches.
Match Recommendations:
– Atsushi Aoki (4/23)
Block B Participants:
Naoya Nomura
Nomura debuted in 2014 and has had all his career in All Japan. He is already a former tag team champion with Jake Lee, who is becoming his biggest rival. In addition, he captured the All Asian Tag Team Championships with Yuma Aoyagi. Nomura is the third man that people talk about when there is discussion about the All Japan future. Nomura recently had a great title shot against Kento Miyahara, which positioned him as a top contender to win his block in order to build to another match with Kento, where he could either defeated Kento in a non-title match, or at least come closer and keep building to finally defeating him.
Nomura’s tournament started really strong with wins over Adonis, Suwama, Jake Lee, and Yoshida, three of those within the first four shows. Then, his tournament was somewhat quiet until the finals when he defeated Suwama to advance to the tiebreaker against Jake Lee.
Match Recommendations:
– Jake Lee (4/4)
– Suwama (4/28)
– Jake Lee (4/28)
Yoshitatsu
This is the same Yoshi Tatsu from WWE and NJPW, the same that broke his neck taking a Styles Clash. He has to be the man that I came in with the least expectations for, yet he exceeded those expectations the most. He wasn’t the best in his block by any means. He still lacks charisma and his wrestling is not top notch, but there is no denying he is far better than what I had ever seen of him. His Yoshitatsu Fantasy finisher, an STO transitioned into a Koji Clutch, was one of my favorite moves of the entire tournament.
His tournament performance had his ups and downs. He meshed well with some and not so much with others. He seemed to be getting placed on the top of the block for a while, but at the end, he just ended up in the middle. His biggest wins were against Joe Doering and Suwama. Similar to Yuma Aoyagi, the thing that I saw most promise in was his tag team work with Yuma and the prospect of them chasing the tag team titles.
Match Recommendations:
– Joe Doering (4/7)
– Jake Lee (4/11)
– Naoya Nomura (4/15)
Suwama
From the veterans, Suwama was the one top contender in Block B. He is the AJPW Tag Team Champion with Shuji Ishikara and a past Champion Carnival winner. Aside from Doering, Suwama was the one other big hoss in the block, but contrary to logic, he actually worked most of his matches as the babyface underdog coming back from being beat up. (I wasn’t a big fan of Suwama playing that role as it exposed him as looking old and gassed out.)
Suwama’s tournament was strong as expected with losses against Nomura, Yoshitatsu, Adonis, and Redman. He put over Nomura in the block finals and had losses to point spoilers along the way.
Match Recommendations:
– Joel Redman (4/20)
– Jake Lee (4/21)
Jake Lee
This kid is a prodigy and I hate him for it. I see him as the antithesis of Kento Miyahara. He is everything character-wise that Kento isn’t. He is the top of the class student that takes school and himself way too seriously, while Kento is the raw talent that doesn’t need to study to get better grades which eats away at Lee from the inside. All Japan has a pair of young wrestlers that are perfect compliments of each other and which can become a classic rivalry.
Jake ended up winning his block in a tiebreaker with Nomura, so we can say he had a good tournament. His losses came to Hashimoto, Suwama, and Nomura who ended up getting his win back. Jake would lose the tournament finals against Miyahara, but in a way that elevated him. That should push him into a darker side until he defeats Kento and captures the Triple Crown. Lee’s matches were, for the most part, enjoyable and worth checking out.
Match Recommendations:
– Naoya Nomura (4/4)
– Yoshitatsu (4/11)
– Naoya Nomura (4/28)
Sam Adonis
Adonis was the guy that we all wondered why All Japan would bring in of all people. He’s not exactly a great wrestler and not exactly making a lot of noise for good reasons. Most of his recent work comes from CMLL, New Japan’s sister promotion, and so, this was a head scratcher.
Having said that, he came in, put on his working boots, and ended up being one of the most enjoyable guys in the block. His charisma oozed out and was contagious with his opponents. Guys like Yoshitatsu or Daichi, who are charisma voids, showed so much more when they faced Adonis. By the end of the tournament, fans and I were seeing Adonis as a babyface. His role in the tournament was to take pins for the benefit of others, only getting wins over Doering, Hashimoto, and Suwama.
Match Recommendations:
– Joel Redman (4/10)
– Jake Lee (4/24)
Joe Doering
Doering is a Canadian with over 15 years of experience. It wasn’t until he went to Japan that he finally struck some luck and got over as basically the new version of Stan Hansen. Doering is a former Triple Crown Champion, and in 2016, he was diagnosed with a brain tumor which he got removed, eventually making a successful return to All Japan. From there on, he would recapture the championship for a second time, only to lose it to Miyahara a couple of months later. He was a top contender in the block, but not the most credible winner with All Japan’s current direction to make a star out of Lee and Nomura.
Doering was my biggest disappointment. He had the points, but his matches were not the all out battles I hoped to see. Him being placed in Block B meant that he was the one big guy and his big lads matches were limited to Suwama and the much smaller Yoshida. He was also a guy that played the line between babyface and heel depending on who he faced, so there was no personal investment in seeing him be either. Doering is one of those guys that i’m surprised not a lot of people have tried to bring in, aside from that terrible Moose vs. Doering match from Xplosion.
Match Recommendations:
– Yoshitatsu (4/7)
– Joel Redman (4/24)
– Naoya Nomura (4/10)
Takashi Yoshida
The sole representative of Dragon Gate this year was Takashi Yoshida, formerly known as Cyber Kong. He trained for some time in the Inoki Dojo and the New Japan Dojo, but the bulk of his career had been with Dragon Gate under a mask. His style is that of a hoss, on the faster side of them, with a lot of reliance on cheating, given his size in this tournament. He was never a guy I particularly cared for in Dragon Gate, and that sentiment was the same here. I hoped to see him go all out on some fights, but I never expected him to be a block contender.
When it came to his matches, they really didn’t blow anyone’s mind as they were kinda just there. In the same way as I described Sai, Yoshida was that guy that you kept forgetting was there. He was the guy that helped adjust points in Block B with wins over Adonis, Redman, Hashimoto, and Yoshitatsu, pretty much everyone who needed to be kept in the bottom.
Match Recommendations:
– Naoya Nomura (4/6)
– Joel Redman (4/14)
Daichi Hashimoto
Daichi Hashimoto, oldest son of the legendary Shinya Hashimoto, represented BJW. I thought he was terrible as this fruit fell far from the tree when it came to this tournament. I saw a kid who wanted to be his father, wanted to be a punk deathmatch wrestler, and wanted to be a strong style fighter, and failed on all accords. He had a history with Zero1, IGF, and BJW, and has his basics down, but you can tell he is lacking a developmental system or an overseas tour for him to really find himself and figure out who he is in wrestling.
I wasn’t a fan of his tournament. He defeated Jake Lee, Nomura, Redman, and Yoshitatsu, and I really only agreed on one of those wins. His matches were just not good and lacked story or intensity, no matter how much he screamed and shouted. His strikes and selling were subpar. Bless his heart, but I think he peaked with his 2011 WON Rookie of the Year Award.
Match Recommendations:
– Jake Lee (4/7)
Joel Redman
Formerly known as Oliver Grey, Redman is notable for being the first ever NXT Tag Team Champion along with Neville. He had been working with RevPro and other British indies since his release, and so, in a way, he was an odd addition to the tournament. He is also arguably smaller than most, but his wrestling style made up for it. I’d venture to say that he was the crisper and most fluid wrestler of the tournament. He was the technician of his group, and played quite well with everyone he faced. He was a clear-cut babyface, someone Ring of Honor would have made champion in 2007, always pushing for sportsmanship and respect.
I’d say that Redman had a great tournament, considering what he was given. His wrestling style shone out of its uniqueness in the block, and pretty much the whole company, and this is a crowd that appreciates a clean cut wrestler, working holds, and clean breaks. Redman had wins over Suwama and Nomura, two of the top contenders, plus Sam Adonis. I can’t say if his performance warrants him being brought back to All Japan, but the rest of the top companies around the world should give him a look.
It appears that WWE has officially taken the first steps towards Ronda Rousey, Becky Lynch, and Charlotte Flair all being involved in the main event of WrestleMania 35.
An angle where Vince McMahon suspended Lynch for 60 days and announced that Charlotte would be taking her place at WrestleMania closed last Monday’s episode of Raw. Charlotte aligned with Vince and fully turned heel, with Vince calling her someone with charisma, someone with charm, and someone who knows their lane and stays in it.
The show didn’t sell out, even in one of WWE’s best markets. The show had more good than bad, with the highlight being the main event, the men’s Chamber match where Daniel Bryan retained and the crowd got so strong behind Kofi Kingston in the Mustafa Ali slot that Vince McMahon changed plans for Fast Lane to put Bryan vs. Kingston on top.
The show was the brainchild of Motoko Baba, to run a big Baba celebration show in 2019, 20 years after his early 1999 death. With her passing away last year, it was her nieces and nephews who put the show together.
All but one count of Mark Hunt’s lawsuit against the UFC, Dana White and Brock Lesnar on the grounds they conspired against him to allow a juiced up Lesnar to fight him at UFC 200 was thrown out of court.
The 2020 Royal Rumble will take place on 1/26 at Minute Maid Park in Houston. Most likely that would also mean Takeover on 1/25 at the Toyota Center, Raw on 1/27 and Smackdown on 1/28.
FOX this weekend started advertising 10/4 as the debut of the new Friday Night Smackdown show.
“Fighting with My Family,” the Dwayne Johnson Seven Bucks Entertainment movie about Growing Up as Paige, which has its big national release on 2/22, has gotten great word-of-mouth so far.
Chris Jericho noted that while he and Gedo are on the same page, that New Japan management hasn’t talked with him about a new deal.
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SUNDAY NEWS UPDATE
WWE
Dave Meltzer has sent in the following in regards to injuries that took place over the weekend:
There was an injury scare last night as Drew McIntyre seemed to have suffered a knee injury during a house show in Tupelo, MS. The match had to go home early, but he is believed to be fine.
Noam Dar suffered what could possibly be a serious knee injury suffered in a match against Mark Andrews during the NXT UK tapings yesterday. He is to be examined in the US when he comes back.
Mark Andrews was knocked out during the match with Dar. It may be a concussion, but the belief is that it wasn’t too serious.
Aleister Black said his goodbyes to NXT during a house show in Daytona Beach, Florida this weekend. He along with the other call-ups will still be part of the NXT TV tapings at least through the next TakeOver.
Dave Schilling, who has written in the past for Bleacher Report, VICE and The Guardian says that he will be joining the WWE creative team next month.
The Rock surprised moviegoers who were watching Fighting With My Family in Atlanta, appearing at a screening of the movie.
Nikki Bella won the WIN award this weekend for best actress in a reality series.
Pro Wrestling
David Finlay wrote on Twitter yesterday that he dislocated his shoulder during the ROH tag team title match on 2/23, writing “Thanks to everyone for all the positive vibes! I did dislocated my shoulder last night but it’s back in now. I’ll see a doctor when I’m home to see what the damage is but hopefully it’s nothing too serious. Thanks again to everyone. See you in the mountains!”
All Japan announced the blocks for this year’s Champion Carnival, which starts on April 4 and runs through April 29.
Block A has Kento Miyahara, Kengo Mashimo, Yuma Aoyagi, Zeus, Gianni Valletta, Ryouji Sai, Dylan James, Shuji Ishikawa,Yuji Okabayashi
Block B has Joe Doering, Jake Lee, Naoya Nomura, Yoshitatsu, Daichi Hashimoto, Sam Adonis, Suwama, Takashi Yoshida, Joel Redman
WALTER vs. David Starr, Fenix vs. Rey Horus, Axel Dieter Jr. vs. Maris Al-Ani, Pentagon Jr. vs. Mark Davis, Timothy Thatcher vs. Lucky Kid, Ilja Dragunov vs. Daisuke Sekimoto, Chris Brookes vs. Shigehiro Irie, and Jurn Simmons vs. Avalanche in a falls count anywhere match are the first round matches in this year’s wXw 16 Carat Gold tournament. The tournament is taking place from March 8-10, with those first round matches happening on the first night.
Starrcast LLC has applied a trademark for the term “Dead Man Talking.”
This week’s MLW Fusion episode is available on YouTube. It has Aerostar vs. Rey Horus, Mance Warner making his debut against Jimmy Yuta, and Rich Swann vs. Lance Anoa’i.
Ed in San Antonio presents the WRESTLEMANIAWeekend Events (more to be added):
Sunday, April 6th, at 12:00 pm: Lunch (all you can eat) at Churrascaria Plataforma ($90 per person), located at 316 W. 49th street in Manhattan. Purchase tickets here~!
Luxury Bus to MetLife Stadium for Wrestlemania: We will depart from the Hilton Midtown (site of Wrestlecon) located at 1335 Avenue of the Americas. Departure time is 4:00 pm and will return from MetLife approximately 30 mins after the event. Times are subject to change, and cost $67.00 per person for the round trip. Purchase tickets here~!