MLW announces working relationship with Dragon Gate

MLW announced a new partnership at their Fightland television tapings on Saturday night.

It was revealed at the tapings that MLW has formed a working relationship with Dragon Gate. Pro Wrestling NOAH was previously MLW’s partner in Japan.

Post Wrestling reported that “MLW and Dragon Gate had been in talks with the deal signed over the past week with the plan to bring Dragon Gate talent over to the U.S once they complete the process of securing visas for the talent.

“It is not known what the time frame is for the first wave of Dragon Gate talent to appear in the U.S. as the process of securing visas is said to be longer in the current climate. MLW will begin the immigration process immediately.”

At their Saturday Night SuperFight pay-per-view in November, MLW announced that they had begun a working relationship with Lucha Libre AAA. That has included AAA wrestlers appearing at MLW’s Zero Hour tapings last month and their Fightland tapings tonight.

Daily Update: UFC 244 fallout, Kenny Omega, Dragon Gate

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F4W NEWSLETTER: Figure Four Weekly: AEW’s non-wrestling segment balancing act Joseph Currier looks at AEW’s balance of matches and talking segments over its first four weeks on TNT.

Four weeks into the promotion’s existence on weekly television, one of AEW’s biggest strengths has also been a bit of a balancing act for them.

Alternatives to WWE have long tried to present themselves as having “less talk, more action.” While WWE is still too reliant on a TV format that was carried by Steve Austin and The Rock and struggles without stars of that caliber, there was a time when that was a more valid criticism than it currently is. The days of WWE programming always opening up with a monotonous 20-minute promo segment from a heel authority figure are gone for now. This decade has seen WWE totally overhaul its hiring practices, bringing the level of the company’s in-ring action higher than it’s ever been.

Finding the right balance between non-wrestling segments and matches is vital. But while WWE has had problems with finding the right mix, the biggest issue is that their talking segments too often just haven’t been very good. They’re overly scripted and rarely accomplish their goal of getting fans more interested in the match they’re supposed to be building. Tons of the most iconic moments in pro wrestling history happened outside of matches. People don’t dislike promos — they dislike bad ones.

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WON NEWSLETTER: November 4, 2019 Observer Newsletter: WWE financials, Crown Jewel, more

In a crazy week, we’ve got the most detailed look at the business of pro wrestling in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

Our lead story updates the WWE business with the key notes from the quarter, why the stock took a big plunge even though profits were above expectations, the key things the market is worried about with the company, and the very different key things regarding brand popularity that I see as major warning signs. 

We cover in-depth the consumer business, tickets, WWE Network, merchandise and more, good news on television ratings, why we know house shows are down but it’s hard to fairly gauge how much, the decline of NXT live and how every other consumer spending category is doing.

The new issue also covers: 

Crown Jewel, the women’s match and its ramifications and why it went the way it did, why Lesnar vs. Velasquez went the way it did, look at the key stories coming out of the show, plus match-by-match coverage with star ratings.

The build for Nate Diaz vs. Jorge Masvidal and on UFC 244 and the ramifications of the key fights, the ticket demand for the show and more on Dwayne Johnson at the show.

John Cena’s philanthropy, changes in Survivor Series plans, original plan for Tyson Fury and why it was changed, Xavier Woods update, HHH looks at how the way they do call-ups from NXT has changed and how it works now, Seth Rollins complains about the fans and what is and isn’t legit, WWE reaction to Smackdown ratings, notes on ticket sales for the five shows in Chicago at the end of the month including AEW television and the demand, DVR viewership for Raw, Hulu viewership for WWE shows, WrestleMania tickets, notes on the next Takeover show, WWE Backstage notes, WWE international TV notes, notes on Carolina on Raw and her long-term role, coach quits PC and new coach hired, all-women’s house show, DVD changes, new name for giant, value of WWE stock and the most-watched shows on the WWE Network, and all the WWE arena events over the past week with results, highlights and business notes.

Kenny Omega entrance video and the Sans connection that appeared on AEW television this week.  It’s a look at what it is and what it isn’t.

Albert Hardie Jr., situation with WWE, the T-shirt, and far more about the situation including his comments, WWE’s comments and much more about it.

Television business and 18-49 demos and look at the expense and future value of the different wrestling television shows, the platform, the night, the rights fees and more for UFC, WWE and AEW.

UFC show from Singapore.

WWE and AEW television shows from the past week.

Ratings of all the major shows, the key demos and quarters for AEW and WWE, what happened head-to-head and what can be learned from them.

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 recorded the weekend show going in depth about the problems with the WWE getting talent out of Saudi Arabia and a lot of reactions from talent. We also covered last night’s UFC show.

As far as trending searches go on Google, Daylight Savings time was first yesterday, but UFC 244 was second with 2.1 million. Canelo Alvarez was No. 4 with 2 million. What’s notable is that nothing from WWE cracked the list. Crown Jewel on Thursday would be the first WWE PPV not to crack the list even with the Lesnar vs. Velasquez main event. Nothing regarded the problems getting talent back cracked the list, although that story really didn’t get out anywhere of note. But the great Smackdown show on Friday didn’t either.

Even though Nate Diaz and Jorge Masvidal talked about doing a rematch, and Diaz claimed he didn’t lose, and was talking all kinds of stuff about Dwayne Johnson for congratulating Masvidal, Dana White said he wasn’t interested. He felt Masvidal won cleanly and said when he saw Diaz’s face after the fight, he saw how bad the cut was and felt it was a legit stoppage. One would think Masvidal gets a shot at the Kamaru Usman vs. Colby Covington winner.

Kenny Omega & Riho beat Antonio Honda & Miyu Yamashita on the DDT show earlier today at Sumo Hall in Tokyo. While Omega worked for DDT, Chris Jericho sent in a video to New Japan to set up a 1/5 Tokyo Dome match with Hiroshi Tanahashi.

MLW last night announced an alliance with AAA, which would mean AAA has alliance with AEW, MLW and Impact.

Dragon Gate’s big show in Osaka tonight on its network will have English commentary by Larry Dallas and Lenny Leonard. Ben K vs. Masato Yoshino for the Open the Dream Gate title is the main event. Dallas and Leonard also do commentary on this coming Thursday’s show at Korakuen Hall.

WWE

  • John Cena will be appearing on Late Night with Seth Myers at 12:30 a.m. Thursday night on NBC talking his new movie “Playing with Fire” that opens this coming weekend.
  • Hulk Hogan and Carlos Colon will both be special guests on ABC’s The Goldbergs on a wrestling-themed show. They’ve had Bill Goldberg on the show in the past. 
  • Lacey Evans kicks off season 20 of Military Makeover airing on Friday night on Lifetime.
  • Becky Lynch replaced Alexa Bliss at today’s Ringside Fest 2019 at Times Square in New York.
  • A story on costuming Sasha Banks.
  • Tyson Kidd talks ring psychology.

MISCELLANEOUS

  • ICW Fear and Loathing Night 12 from today in Glasgow before about 750 fans:  Jordan Devlin b Kenny Williams, Alexander Dean b Aaron Echo, Sha Samuels & Jack Jester & Noam Dar b Kings of the North & Adam Maxted, Grado b Ravie Davie in a lumberjack match, Sami Callihan b BT Gunn, Kid Fite b Damien Dunn in a street fight, Viper & KLR b Angel Hayes & Xia Brookside, Liam Thompson b Wolfgang to keep the Zero G title (thanks to Jordan Clark)
  • Dragon Lee was announced for Expo Lucha on 8/15 and 8/16 in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena.  Also announced are Dr. Wagner Jr., Tinieblas Jr., Octagon, Solar, Pirata Morgan, Mascarita Dorada, Psicosis, Juventud Guerrera, Super Crazy, Mr. Aguila and Laredo Kid.
  • Bar Wrestling from Halloween night in Baldwin Park, CA:  Heather Monroe & Katarina Waters & Christina Von Eerie b Watts & Rust Taylor & BHK, Orange Cassidy (dressed as Priscilla Kelly) b Priscilla Kelly (dressed as Orange Cassidy), Ashley Vox & Delmi Exo (dressed as The Young Bucks) b Jake Atlas & Dom Kubrick (dressed up as characters from SpongeBob), Brian Cage b Kris Statlander, Nicole Savoy & Ruby Raze b Tyler Bateman & Andy Brown, Addy Starr b Joey Ryan in a Lego death match.  Next show is 11/6 in Los Angeles at the Bootleg Theater with the debut of 17-year-old Rok-C, who is gaining popularity in Texas, facing Ryan, Atlas vs. Effy, Nick Gage vs. Kikutaro and more. (thanks to Shannon Walsh and wrestlingwithdemons.net) 
  • Robbie Eagles vs Emman the Kid is booked for MCW on 11/9 in Melbourne, Australia.  Gino Gambino and Bad Luck Fale are also on that show.
  • Rise on Friday night from Berwyn, IL:  Zan Phoenix b Bel Pierce, Elayna Black & Hawlee Cromwell b Dust & Ash, Lindsay Snow b Thunderkitty, Mercedes Martinez & Miranda Alize b Ashley Vox & Delmi Exo, Candy Lee b Jamie Senegal, Taya Valkyrie b Allysin Kay in a no DQ or count out match, Jessicka Havok & Nevaeh b Charli Evans & Jessica Troy, Cassandro b Saraya Knight with Colt Cabana as referee, Kylie Rae won ladder match over Priscilla Kelly, Hyan, Ruby Raze, Jesus Bryce and Jake Atlas, Big Swole b Laynie Luck to keep Phoenix of Rise title, Shotzi Blackheart b Rosemary in a no holds barred match.  This is Blackheart’s last match with the promotion since she’s going to WWE. (thanks to Shannon Walsh)
  • Shimmer from yesterday in Berwyn, IL
    114: Lady Frost b Jenna Lynn, Kris Statlander b Marti Belle , Charli Evans b Bel Pierce, Ashley Vox & Delmi Exo b Hot Scoop Skylar & Davienne, Hyan b Brittany Blake, Kimber Lee b Nevaeh, Saraya Knight b Ruby Raze, Priscilla Kelly b Shazza McKenzie, Kelly Anne won six-way over Jessicka Havok, Su Yung, Allysin Kay,Jessica Troy and Solo Darling, Shotzi Blackheart b Dust, Mercedes Martinez & Cheerleader Melissa b Nicole Savoy & Big Swole to keep tag titles
    115: Jenna Lynn b Hawlee Cromwell, Ruby Raze b Nevaeh, Shazza McKenzie b Jody Threat, Charli Evans & Jessica Troy b Willow Nightingale & Solo Darling, Rhia O’Reilly b Veda Scott, Priscilla Kelly b Dust, Thunder Kitty b Lady Frost, Kimber Lee b Saraya Knight, Shotzi Blackheart b Holidead, Delmi Exo & Ashley Vox b Mercedes Martinez & Cheerleader Melissa to win tag titles, Nicole Savoy b Kelly Anne to keep Shimmer title (thanks to Shannon Walsh)
  • Shimmer results from today: Candy Lee b Jamie Senegal, Elayna Black b Sophie King, Zen Phoenix b Valentina Loca, Holidead b Veda Scott, Willow Nightingale & Solo Darling b Hot Scoop Skylar & Davienne, Su Yung b Thunder Kitty, Marti Belle b Shazza McKenzie, Dust b Kelly Anne, Jessicka Havok b Ruby Raze, Hyan won three-way over Rhia O’Reilly and Kris Statlander to become the Interim Heart of Shimmer champion, Mercedes Martinez b Big Swole, Ashley Vox & Delmi Exo b Charli Evans & Jessicka Troy to keep tag titles, Kimber Lee won elimination match over Nicole Savoy, Priscilla Kelly and Shotzi  Blackheart to win Shimmer title. They did a farewell to Blackheart after the match. (thanks to Thrang Thrang Gozxinbulx)
  • CWE on 11/11 in Saskatoon, SK at the Cosmo Civic Center with Jimmy Jacobs and Juventud Guerrera.
  • About 500 fans stayed after the Calgary Hitmen last night to see a PWA wrestling show on Bret Hart night. In a six-man tag match, Bran McGrattan, a former NHL player, was used at the ringside enforcer (thanks to Ryan Pike) 
  • Southern Illinois Championship Wrestling from last night in Swansea, IL:  Tony Chino b Dave Doll, Sean Vincent b Curt Gannon, Ricky Cruz b Jake Prater, Superstar Steve Fender b Billy McNeil, Shawn Santel & Mauler McDarby DCOR Big Texan & Waco, Damian Blade b Khayman, Ken Kasa & Christopher Hargas b PT Beckham & Chris Kade, Curtis Wylde b Gary Jackson, Flash Flanagan b Attila Khan in a no DQ match.  Arn Anderson, Barry Windham and J.J. Dillon were special guests at this show (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)
  • Pro Wrestling Eve runs this coming Saturday and Sunday in London at Bethnal Green.  Jazz will be appearing on the shows.
  • A story on wrestling legend Johnny Valentine (thanks to Mike Kuzmuk)

Daily Pro Wrestling History: Daily Pro Wrestling History (11/03): Bobby Roode wins TNA World title

CONTACT INFORMATION

Daily Update: Jon Moxley, PAC, Sinclair Broadcast Group

DAILY UPDATE

Latest News:

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We’re looking for reports tonight from WWE in Bogota, Colombia, NXT in Sanford, FL and Defy in Tacoma, WA to [email protected]

CMLL TONIGHT AT ARENA MEXICO IN MEXICO CITY AT 9:30 P.M. ON CMLL YOUTUBE PAGE

  • Sonic & Super Astro Jr. vs. Espiritu Negro & El Hijo del Signo
  • Atomo & Gallito & Microman vs. Chamuel & Guapito & Perico Zacarias
  • Audaz & Flyer & Titan vs. Cuatrero & Forastero & Templario
  • Volador Jr. vs. Sanson
  • Angel de Oro & Mistico & Niebla Roja vs. Euforia & Gran Guerrero & El Terrible
  • Cavernario & Diamante Azul & Ultimo Guerrero vs. Ciber the Main Man & The Chris & Valiente

IMPACT ON PURSUIT AT 10 P.M. EASTERN TONIGHT

Saturday we’re looking for reports from WWE in Lima, Peru, ROH in Atlanta and NXT in Tampa to [email protected]

COMBATE AMERICAS AT MIDNIGHT EASTERN TONIGHT ON UNIVISION, UNIVISION DEPORTES AND DAZN FROM LAKE TAHOE, NEVADA

  • Erick Sanchez (155.3) vs. Jose Luis Verdugo (155.3)
  • Andres Quintana (144.8) vs.; Bruno Cannetti (144.9) to determine Combate Americas featherweight champion
  • Gustavo Lopez (135.0) vs. Joey Ruque (134.2) for bantamweight title

NEW JAPAN BEST OF THE SUPER JUNIORS AT SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY

  • Alex Coughlin vs. Jonathan Gresham
  • Robbie Eagles vs. Clark Connors
  • Shota Umino vs  Bushi
  • Ren Narita & Karl Fredericks vs.  Taiji Ishimori & Gedo
  • Jushin Liger & Amazing Red vs. Yoh & Rocky Romero
  • Caristico vs. Soberano Jr.
  • TJP vs. El Phantasmo
  • Dragon Lee vs. Ryusuke Taguchi
  • Will Ospreay vs. Sho

ROH FROM CENTER STAGE IN ATLANTA AT 6 P.M. EASTERN SATURDAY NIGHT ON HONOR CLUB (BROADCAST STARTS AT 8 P.M.)

  • Brian Johnson vs. Austin Gunn in Top Prospect tournament
  • Haitian Sensation vs  Ken Dixon in Top Prospect tournament
  • Angelina Love vs Sumie Sakai
  • Chase Owens vs. LSG vs. PJ Black for a TV title shot the next night
  • Rhett Titus vs. Shaheem Ali
  • Beer City Bruiser vs. Vinny Marseglia
  • Silas Young & Okumura & Felino vs. Cheeseburger & Eli Isom & Ryan Nova
  • Marty Scurll vs. Bandido
  • PCO & Brody King vs. Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams
  • Mark & Jay Briscoe & Shane Taylor & Matt Taven vs. Jay Lethal & Jeff Cobb & Rush & Kenny King

BELLATOR FROM BRIDGEPORT, CT WEBSTER ARENA SATURDAY NIGHT AT 9 P.M. EASTERN ON PARAMOUNT TV AND DAZN

  • Tyrell Fortune (247) vs. Rudy Schaffroth (243)
  • David Rickels (175) vs. Yaroslov Amosov (175)
  • Alejandra Lara (134) vs. Taylor Turner (136)
  • Vitaly Minakov (262) vs.; Javy Ayala (265)
  • Matt Mitrione (258) vs. Sergei Kharitonov (264)

MLW AT 9 P.M. EASTERN SATURDAY NIGHT ON BEINSPORTS

  • L.A. Park vs. Jimmy Havoc street fight
  • MJF vs. Teddy Hart for middleweight title

Sunday has New Japan in Long Beach and the Walter Pyramid with the semifinals and finals of the Best of the Super Juniors tournament, WWE in Panama City, Panama and ROH in Nashville.

ROH FROM THE NASHVILLE FAIRGROUNDS AT 8 P.M. EASTERN ON HONOR CLUB

  • Rush vs. Vinny Marseglia
  • Shane Taylor vs. Owens/LSG.Black winner for TV title
  • Matt Taven vs. Jay Lethal vs. Jeff Cobb vs. Kenny King in an elimination match – whoever beats Taven gets an ROH title shot, if Taven wins, whoever he beats last can never challenge for the titles
  • Mark & Jay Briscoe vs. Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson for ROH tag title
  • PCO & Brody King & Marty Scurll vs. Bandido & Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams for trios titles

NEW JAPAN WORLD PRO WRESTLING SATURDAY NIGHT AT 9 P.M. EASTERN ON AXS TV

  • Juice Robinson & Toa Henare vs. Jon Moxley & Shota Umino
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Tomoaki Honma & Toru Yano & Hirooki Goto & Togi Makabe vs. Tetsuya Naito & Evil & Sanada & Shingo Takagi & Bushi
  • KENTA & Yoshi-Hashi & Tomohiro Ishii vs. Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa & Bad Luck Fale
  • Kazuchika Okada & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Minoru Suzuki & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Jay White in G-1 finals

F4W NEWSLETTER: Figure Four Weekly: Sasha Banks returns to WWE Joseph Currier looks at the return of Sasha Banks and what it means for the women’s division. Plus, Bryan Rose’s Japan notes, and Vinny’s TV reviews.

The return of Banks gives Lynch the opponent she’s needed since WrestleMania. After winning the biggest women’s match in company history, Lynch was put in an impossible position by WWE. She had to maintain her momentum without having any credible opponents to face. Lacey Evans was a poor choice for her first challenger.

One of WWE’s most important goals should have been elevating Lynch and the women’s division further. It was always known that Rousey wouldn’t be with WWE forever. It’s great that Rousey was able to have main event-level matches with the company. It’s great that the Rousey/Lynch/Charlotte Flair rivalry was so deserving of its top spot going into WrestleMania.

But a year of progress doesn’t mean that much if you don’t continue to build upon it. Instead of Lynch facing someone who was near her level, her opponent was a wrestler who wasn’t even in a star in NXT.

WON NEWSLETTER: August 26, 2019 Observer Newsletter: Birth of the Wednesday Night WarDetails on NXT and AEW competing on Wednesday nights, plus tons of news.

The birth of the Wednesday Night War is the top story in the new edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. 

We discuss how the NXT to USA deal came about, when NXT wrestlers were told, how this impacts the WWE/Fox relationship, and what this means for the NXT brand, going forward. 

We have details on the finances of the NXT to USA deal, and we break down the head-to-head aspect of NXT vs. AEW. We also have comments from a major television executive who gives his perspective on the deal, as well as the potential for audience burnout. 

A story on the latest AEW TV taping sellouts is also featured in the new issue. We also have notes on the secondary ticket market demand for all of the AEW shows. 

An obituary for Eddie Marlin is also in the new issue, with a ton of details on his life. 

Also in this issue, Ryan Frederick covers this past weekend’s UFC show, and we have detailed TV ratings and business notes on the show. 

We also wrap up our G1 coverage with a detailed breakdown of each individual’s star ratings for the tournament. 

We have full coverage of all the WWE television shows from the past week.

As always, we have in-depth looks at the ratings of all the major shows,the key demos for the WWE shows and what can be learned from them.

We also have the 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.

FRIDAY NEWS UPDATE

So in short form, Jon Moxley has MRSA staph in his left elbow and his doctor believes he will have to be out of action for four weeks. Kenny Omega faces Pac in Chicago at All Out.  Originally, Omega vs. Pac was a planned direction months ago so they are going to end up doing it here.  Moxley vs. Omega will take place at some point, perhaps the next PPV although they also could put it on the first TV show.  Right now there is no confirmation whether Pac will be in for any other dates besides this one, but they’ve been in talks to bring him in for some time.  Moxley picked up the infection while in the G-1 tournament and was working for NEW this weekend with the problem.  

Also, from those close to the situation, Dragon Gate has no issue with Pac working AEW. And Pac is expected to return there.

The long talked about Sinclair Broadcasting purchase of the Fox Regional Sports Networks was announced today by Sinclair. This should get ROH exposure in some new markets.

Regarding ticket sales, AEW did not sellout in Pittsburgh or Charleston, WV today.  I don’t have any figures on how the shows did   It appears from seating charts both shows did well.

There are still a few tickets left for my show a week from Saturday morning in Chicago. I will be doing the show with Jim Valley as the host/moderator.

WWE

  • Ballers, the HBO show starring Dwayne Johnson, has announced its final season will start Sunday at 10:30 p.m.  It will be an eight episode season on Sunday nights.

UFC

  • Marc Diakiese vs. Lando Vannata has been added to the 9/28 show in Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • Mark O Madsen, who debuts on the Copenhagen show, is 8-0 in MMA, but also captured the silver medal at 165 in the 2016 Olympics in Greco-Roman wrestling for Denmark.  He’s 34 and the first time he won a medal at the world championships was in 2005.

MISCELLANEOUS

  • Riho vs. Hikaru Shida will be on All Out, with the winner of that match facing the winner of the Casino Battle Royale that takes place also in Chicago to crown a first champion.  That first title match takes place on he 10/2 show in Washington, DC.
  • Yuka Sakazaki of AEW was announced for the New Taiwan Wresting show on 9/14.  
  • I Believe in Wrestling on 9/6 in Orlando at the Team Vision Dojo is headlined by Chasyn Rance vs.Deon James for Florida title
  • NFC announced a free NFC Fight Night t-shirt to anyone who buys a cageside seat for the 10/12 show at the Pink Pony in Atlanta.  Must be 18-or-older to attend.
  • Warrior Wrestling, Zelo Pro and Impact have a joint show on 10/19 in Merrionette Park, IL at 115 Bourbon Street, the building AAW frequently runs.  That will be the Saturday night before Bound for Glory in Chicago.   
  • Wildkat Wrestling on 11/3 in Kenner, LA was the 4,600-seat Ponctchatrain Center.  Among those announced for the show are Booker T, Stevie Ray, Rob Van Dam, MVP, Psicosis, Honky Tonk Man, Stevie Richards, Luke Hawx, Bestia 666 and more.
  • A story on former star Steve Keirn and his background in pro wrestling
  • The Fight Network diary series on Rhino.

Daily Pro Wrestling History: CM Punk wins World title at SummerSlam 2009

CONTACT INFORMATION

Daily Update: WWE/MSG, Sasha Banks, Dragon Gate

DAILY UPDATE

Latest News:

Latest Audio:

F4W NEWSLETTER: Figure Four Weekly: Recapping WWE Stomping Grounds

After a lack of interest heading into the pay-per-view, Stomping Grounds was a show that exceeded expectations.

Given that there weren’t really any surprises at the PPV, that’s probably mostly due to expectations being set too low. Nothing on the show was dramatically better than it should have been. The PPV succeeded where most good WWE shows do. Even if the build was underwhelming, a talented roster was able to go out to the ring and have good matches throughout much of the card.

WON NEWSLETTER: July 8, 2019 Observer Newsletter: The life and death of Perro Aguayo

With a gigantic week of news, we’ve got a double issue of the Observer this week, leading off with a look at the career of Perro Aguayo, one of the biggest drawing cards in pro wrestling history.

We look at his career highlights, the feud that made him a superstar, the big rivalries and big business booms he was part of, his most famous matches, the formation of AAA and his biggest career wins.

We also have more on Eric Bischoff and Paul Heyman leading brands going forward.  We look at the angles on Raw and whose fingerprints were on what, the level of power they look to have, why this move was made, Wall Street’s reaction to the move, how AEW fits into the picture, the audience they are trying to get back the Raw ratings increase that didn’t hold for Smackdown, Heyman and Bischoff talk about their new positions, when Bischoff starts and an analysis of Heyman’s first moves.

We also look at AEW’s Fyter Fest, the chair shot, the preshow, the business numbers, comparisons with WWE and UFC programming, match by match coverage with star ratings and poll results.

We also look at why the U.K. November tour is being rapidly changed, the Evolve special on WWE Network, Stomping Grounds business update, the story behind David Starr stomping on WWE tile belt and WWE reaction, Performance Center news, most-watched shows on the WWE Network and a rundown with business notes on all the WWE arena events this past week.

We also look at the career of Jacques Rougeau Sr, one of the biggest stars in Montreal wrestling history.  We look at the history of the Rougeau family, how Jacques got into wrestling, why he quit at first, what brought him back, how role in making the career of Ivan Koloff, his sons getting into wrestling, his biggest matches, his Jarry Stadium main event, the first $100,000 gate in Canada, and the Rougeaus feud with the Garvins.

We also look at WWE’s tour of Japan this past week, with notes on both shows and business notes as well.

We run through New Japan’s tour of Australia, with business notes , Southern Showdown match-by-match coverage with star ratings and poll results and the Ospreay-Eagles match.

We also update Extreme Rules with matches announced and others that could be added.

We’ve also got full coverage of UFC in Minneapolis including detailed business notes.

We’ve got a rundown on ROH Bet in the World from Baltimore, with business notes, match-by-match coverage and star ratings.

We also look at the changing television situation in the U.K. with the WWE’s new deal with BT Sports and AEW’s new deal.

We look at the TripleMania card and the unique team of Cody & Psycho Clown & Cain Velasquez.  There’s also notes from Killer Kross, who is training Velasquez.

We also look at the wrestling career of Yoshiaki Yatsu, who had his leg amputated over the past week.  We look at his 1980s heyday when he was one of the best in the world, why he was important in history, his amateur background and his famous Pride match with Gary Goodridge.

We also look at the death of Jerry Seltzer, the famed Roller Derby promoter, how that game worked, how it exploded in popularity, why it died off, and Seltzer’s later role in the ticketing business.

We also run down the ratings of all the major TV shows, along with detailed demo info for the WWE shows.

We also have the 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

Additional notes by Joseph Currier

WWE

  • Nikki Cross vs. Carmella has been added to tonight’s SmackDown, which will take place at the SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire . It’s the go home show for Extreme Rules and will also feature Kevin Owens vs. Dolph Ziggler, Intercontinental Champion Finn Balor vs. Shinsuke Nakamura in a non-title match, A Tag Team Championship Summit with Daniel Bryan & Rowan, Big E & Xavier Woods, and Heavy Machinery, and the reveal of Aleister Black’s Extreme Rules opponent.
  • Oney Lorcan and Ariya Daivari will face off in an “anything goes” match on 205 Live tonight.
  • According to this unlisted video on WWE’s YouTube page, they will be taping Raw and SmackDown on September 9th and 10th, respectively at Madison Square Garden. This comes just days before AAA is scheduled to run the venue on September 15.
  • Kofi Kingston did not wrestle at last night’s house show in Glens Falls, New York due to what was announced as an injury. A Wrestling Inc correspondent noted that Kingston said he’d be ready for Extreme Rules.
  • The Authors of Pain teamed for the first time since January at last night’s house show, losing to the team of Matt Hardy and Ali. Akam had been out due to a knee injury, but the two most recently appeared at WWE Super Showdown, competing in the 50-man battle royal.
  • Sasha Banks trained at the Sendai Girls dojo while in Japan.
  • Booker T talked about his situation with Starrcast, saying that he was unaware that the Conrad Thompson booking was for Starrcast, with Thomspon only saying it was an autograph signing, and that WWE had nothing to do with him pulling out.
  • Gary “The GOAT” Garbutt on Raw last night was former Alliance of American Football player Kosha Irby.
  • Bianca Belair recently celebrated her college graduation.

Pro Wrestling

  • Dragon Gate’s Kobe Pro Wrestling Festival 2019 event on July 21 will have English commentary from Rich Bocchini and Larry Dallas.
  • Kota Ibushi injured his ankle during his G1 match against KENTA on Saturday. He said that he won’t give up regardless of injury.
  • Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestling announced that Shoko Nakajima has been pulled from this weekend’s event as she is going to America for AEW’s Fight for the Fallen show on Saturday. Nakajmina later apologized on Twitter, confirming she will be in the US this weekend but didn’t mention AEW specifically.
  • New Jack is releasing a memoir titled New Jack: Memoir of a Pro Wrestling Extremist which will be released on November 28.
  • Kevin Nash turns 60 years old today.

UFC/MMA

  • Tony Ferguson has expressed interest in moving up from lightweight, but is ready to replace either Khabib Nurmagomedov or Dustin Porier in case either one pulls out ahead of UFC 242.
  • The UFC has promoted Jeff Novitzky from vice president of Athlete Health and Performance to senior vice president of Athlete Health and Performance.
  • John Lineker has signed with ONE Championships.
  • Mickey Gall vs. Salim Touhari has been added to the 8/3 UFC event in Newark, while Mike Perry vs. Vicente Luque has been added to the 8/10 event in Montevideo.
  • Edson Barboza vs. Paul Felder has been confirmed for UFC 242 on 9/7.

Daily Pro Wrestling History: Rey Mysterio wins WCW Cruiserweight title

CONTACT INFORMATION

Dragon Gate talent pulled from WrestleCon due to visa issues

Dragon Gate wrestlers have been pulled from next week’s WrestleCon due to visa issues.

WrestleCon announced this afternoon in a press release that they had worked with an immigration attorney to directly work with Dragon Gate to bring wrestlers to the US. Despite negotiations through the proper channels, it still wasn’t able to be done.

“Unfortunately, after two separate visa application attempts, including conversations with the Japanese Consulate, the Department of Homeland Security, the National Visa Center and the Visa Office in Tokyo, we are left without any more time to make this possible” the release said.

WrestleCon explained that because they are not the primary employers of Dragon Gate talent, nor do WrestleCon offer annual employment contracts, there are no visa options for them to come in. A similar issue with PAC also forced WrestleCon to announce earlier this week that he would be unable to come to the US as well.

Black Label Pro later confirmed that with the visa issues, Masato Yoshino will be unable to appear at their Adventures in Wrestling event on April 5. Shigehiro Irie was announced as a replacement opponent for Jonathan Gresham.

The revised card for next week’s US vs. The World event, which also takes place on April 5, has been updated on Twitter.

New Japan had a similar issue earlier this year after they were unable to bring in a number of wrestlers to the United States due to the government shutdown. As a result, a number of independent and ROH contracted wrestlers were brought in to fill gaps.

Giant Baba memorial show results: Tanahashi, Miyahara face off

Here are some quick results and notes from this morning’s Giant Baba Memorial show, which took place at Sumo Hall.

Antonio Inoki came out and said some words to start the show, ending with his catch phrase.

Mitsuo Momota won the Giant Baba Memorial battle royal

This was largely a comedy match as I think most of the people in this match can’t really take anything that would be considered a bump. Stalker Ichikawa came in at one point but eliminated himself after falling off the ropes. It ended up boiling down to Masao Inoue and Mitsuo Momota, the son of Giant Baba’s trainer Rikidozan, with Momota reversing a roll-up for the win.

Tomoaki Honma, Yuji Okabayashi, Naoya Nomura and Ren Narita defeated Daichi Hashimoto, Kazushi Miyamoto, Tomohiko Hashimoto and Takuya Nomura

Just kind of a match, nothing more. Daichi came out to his father’s theme song. Okabayashi submitted Nomura with a torture rack.

Atsushi Onita, Hideki Hosaka, Kendo Kashin and Hideki Suzuki defeated Great Kojika, Mitsuya Nagai, Shuji Ishikawa and Hikaru Sato

Onita’s team was seconded by Freddy Kruger, which if you remember used to be Doug Gilbert under a mask. Don’t know who was under the mask here. He helped set up a table for his team at one point. Onita went into a barbed wire board set up in the corner. Hideki Suzuki picked up the win with a suplex, pinning Hikaru Sato.

The retirement ceremony of Abdullah the Butcher followed. He came to the ring wheelchair-bound, assisted by Joel Deaton. People came out and shared photos from his career and gave him flowers. Mil Mascaras, Dos Caras, Tiger Mask (Satoru Sayama), Jun Akiyama, Keiji Mutoh, Seiji Sakaguchi, Stan Hansen and Dory Funk Jr, all came out and took pictures.There were also messages from the Destroyer (who said his doctors would not allow him to travel to Japan) and Minoru Suzuki.

Butcher said he wished Giant Baba was here, and mentioned how one of his friends passed away recently. He says he wants all the young kids out there to not put their parents in homes because someday they’ll get old themselves. They then did the ten bell salute. 

Taichi, Yoshinobu Kanemaru and Taka Michinoku defeated Masa Fuchi, Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Yuma Aoyagi

This was a fun match, not anything special technically but the crowd got super into it when Fuchi was tagged in. Aogi looked really good when he was in. Taichi distracted the referee, low blowed Fuchi then cradled him for the win.

SANADA and BUSHI defeated Jake Lee and Koji Iwamoto and Ayato Yoshida and Shota Umino

This was a good sprint, with everyone looking good. Kinda short, though. BUSHI misted Iwamoto and SANADA put Lee in the paradise lock, then pinned Umino with the moonsault.

Naomichi Marufuji and Jinsei Shinzaki defeated Masaaki Mochizuki and Shun Skywalker

This was good. Marufuji was great, Shinzaki held his own and the Dragon Gate guys picked up the pace big time. Skywalker looked really athletic in spots, which was probably the goal.  Marufuji and Mochizuki had a really great exchange towards the end, with Marufuji picking up the win with a cradle.

Jun Akiyama, Taiyo Kea and Takao Omori defeated Satoshi Kojima, Yuji Nagata and Omasu Nishimura

A good match, with everyone looking pretty good and a hot crowd. Akiyama pinned Nishimura with the exploder suplex.

Mil Mascaras and Dos Caras defeated NOSAWA and Kaz Hayashi

Mil Mascaras (76) was not moving good at all and rarely left his feet. Dos Caras (67) actually moved real well and did some good grappling at the start with Hayashi. Mascaras did, in fact, go to the top rope slowly and hit what would be considered a crossbody press for the win.

Kento Miyahara and Daisuke Sekimoto defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi and Yoshitatsu

Miyahara came out wearing the original three Triple Crown titles. This was definitely a pro-Miyahara crowd, so Yoshitatsu and Tanahashi worked as the heels, preventing Miyahara from tagging in Sekimoto. He eventually did run wild. Miyahara got the win over Yoshitatsu with a German suplex into a bridge. This was a pretty good main event; the interactions between Miyahara and Tanahashi were really good and the work by Sekimoto and Yoshitatsu were well done too. Not blowaway great, but a fun match.

Miyahara cut a promo after the match as Tanahashi got up and they both said their catchphrases. All four raised each other’s hands as the rest of the card came out for the Giant Baba memorial ceremony. Johnny Ace, Ricky Steamboat and Ric Flair sent videotaped messages. They then rang the bell ten times as the show ended.

I’d say this was a fun event. Some of the wrestling wasn’t that great, but most of it was solid. Seeing the older faces live was fun, and the idea of everyone coming together for a show like this was really cool. 

Tanahashi facing Miyahara in tag match at Baba memorial show

The main event for the Giant Baba Memorial show has been set.

IWGP Heavyweight champion Hiroshi Tanahashi will team with Yoshitatsu (who has been regularly wrestling for All Japan) to take on the team of Triple Crown champion Kento Miyahara and Big Japan’s Daisuke Sekimoto. It will be the first time that Tanahashi and Miyahara will be in the same ring.

The event marks the 20th anniversary of Giant Baba’s death, as he passed away from liver failure on January 31, 1999. It will also have the official retirement ceremony for Abdullah the Butcher, who wrestled regularly for All Japan for a number of decades.

Here is the full, likely final card for the memorial show which will take place on February 19 at Sumo Hall. Broadcasting information is currently unknown:

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi and Yoshitatsu vs. Kento Miyahara and Daisuke Sekimoto
  • Mil Mascaras and Dos Caras vs. NOSAWA Rongai and Kaz Hayashi
  • Naomichi Marufuji and Jinsei Shinzaki vs. Masaaki Mochizuki and Shun Skywalker
  • Satoshi Kojima, Yuji Nagata and Omasu Nishimura vs. Jun Akiyama, Takao Omori and Taiyo Kea
  • Atsushi Onita, Kendo Kashin, Hideki Suzuki and Hideki Hosaka vs. Great Kojika, Mitsuya Nagai, Shuji Ishikawa and Hikaru Sato in a street fight tornado bunkhouse deathmatch
  • SANADA and BUSHI vs. Jake Lee & Koji Iwamoto vs. Ayato Yoshida & Shota Umino in a three way match
  • Taichi, Yoshinobu Kanemaru and Taka Michinoku vs. Masanobu Fuchi, Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Yuma Aoyagi
  • Kazushi Miyamoto, Tomohiko Hashimoto, Daichi Hashimoto and Takuya Nomura vs. Tomoaki Honma, Yuji Okabayashi, Naoya Nomura and Ren Narita
  • Giant Baba Memorial battle royal featuring Mitsuo Momota, Kim Duk, Joel Deaton, MEN’s Teioh, TARU, Ryuji Hijikata, Yuto Aijima, Tsuyoshi Kikuchi, Masahito Kakihara, Masao Inoue, Tamon Honda and Yasu Urano

PAC wins Dragon Gate’s Open the Dream Gate title

The man formerly known as Neville was won gold in Dragon Gate.

PAC defeated Masato Yoshino today at Fantastic Gate 2018 inside Korakuen Hall to win the company’s top single title, the Open the Dream Gate championship. Yoshino had held the title for 177 days, winning it back on June 10. 

This comes after a long period where PAC’s contract was frozen by WWE after he walked out before an episode of Raw back in October of 2017. He remained sidelined with his contract situation up in the air until August, where it was reported he was no longer under WWE contract. He then resurfaced in Dragon Gate a few months later, aligning himself with the R.E.D stable on October 2.

PAC is scheduled for a number of dates in the United Kingdom. The most high profile bout is a match between him and Will Ospreay that will take place at a upcoming RevPro event on February 15.

Neville returns to the ring for Dragon Gate

Neville made a surprise return to professional wrestling this morning for a promotion that he’s very familiar with.

After nearly a year of speculation about his status, Neville — going by his old in-ring name PAC and wrestling as part of the R.E.D. stable — teamed with Eita to defeat Shingo Takagi & BxB Hulk in the main event of today’s Dragon Gate show at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.

Eita cut a promo before the match, the lights went out, and Neville attacked Takagi from behind. Neville got on the microphone and told Korakuen Hall that he’s back. He then asked if the fans remembered him. He said they may think he resembles someone they once knew, but the man who stands in front of them today is very different — and that’s bad news for Takagi.

Neville said Takagi has overstayed his welcome and then attacked him as the match began. He eventually pinned Takagi after hitting the Red Arrow.

Neville cut a post-match promo where he told the crowd he’s there to obliterate their favorite wrestlers. It was announced that Neville will be wrestling in a four-team tag match at the promotion’s show at Korakuen Hall on November 6.

Prior to today’s return, Neville had stayed out of the public eye since his last appearance for WWE in October 2017. In August of this year, WWE confirmed that Neville was no longer under contract with them.

Neville debuted for Dragon Gate in 2007 and departed the promotion when he signed with WWE in 2012.

DR. KEITH PRESENTS: King Of Gate!!!

With the NJPW Best Of Super Juniors, All Japan’s Champion Carnival, BJW’s Strong Climb, wXw 16 Carat Gold and PROGRESS’ Super Strong Style 16 – it’s been the year of the great wrestling tournaments but the leader in the clubhouse thus far, and the tournament that has set the marker down for the G1, the CWC and the Super J Cup, was Dragon Gate’s King Of Gate!

Alan watched it all as did his guest this week: THE GURU OF GRAPPLING Mr. Joe Lanza! Alan and Joe talk all the best matches, the breakout stars, the stories of the tournament and so much more. The Dragon Gate wrestlers are among the best in the world and they don’t get enough credit. This week, the DKP shines a light on a very deserving promotion! It’s a must for DG fans but also a show worth checking out if you just wanna get excited about pro wrestling!

CHECK IT!!!

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Alan4L’s Japanese Wrestling Notebook: Dragon Gate & Sendai Girls’ biggest show

I’ve been in Japan for a few days for some great wrestling action at Korakuen Hall. Here’s a rundown of what I’ve seen:

Dragon Gate:

Yosuke Santa Maria & Stalker Ichikawa (dressed as Stan Hansen for the second time this week) vs.Ryo Jimmy Saito & Genki Horiguchi H.A.GeeMeee!!! 

Super fun comedy match with some good action at times.Santa Maria is such an entertaining performer and really got to shine here. Her push continued with a pinfall win over Genki.

Don Fujii & U-T vs. Kaito Ishida & Takehiro Yamamura

Wow, this was incredible. It had everything you’d want from it. Don Fujii being surly and beating the tar out of the young guys, the young guys being ultra-competitive with each other, great crowd heat and a fantastic finish. This was perfect for what they set out for.

El Lindaman vs. T-Hawk

Huge upset here as Lindaman got the biggest singles victory of his career, knocking off T-Hawk with a Cross Armbreaker after ten minutes of good action.

Kzy, CIMA & Gamma vs. Monster Express

Excellent fast paced trios match, with charisma abound. Like in the last match, this had a huge result as Big R Shimizu beat CIMA clean with the Shot Put Slam. The crowd went wild for the finish.

Punch Tominaga, Dragon Kid & Eita vs. Naruki Doi, Kotoka & Monday Ryu

The stip here was that Punch had to retire if he lost. The result was a white hot atmosphere with the crowd living and dying with the nearfalls. Eita made Kotoka tap with the El Numero Uno. The finishing stretch of this was just out of this world.

Verserk vs. The Jimmys

With special “Jimmy for a night”, Masaaki Mochizuki in tow, the Jimmys scored a huge victory in the main event after 20 minutes of insane action. They did an incredible job weaving Verserk strife into a match which involved so much coordination and timing. It was incredible to watch a match like this in front of the Japanese fans. Susumu pinned YAMATO after a vicious Jumbo No Kachi lariat. Watch out for The Jimmys entrance and yours truly getting involved.

Post match, Verserk split into two sides to set up the annual DEAD OR ALIVE cage match where hair and masks are at stake. We got a bonus 19 second Cyber Kong/Mondai Ryu match to determine who could avoid the Cage. Mondai won.

Sendai Girls

This was the biggest show in the history of the promotion as they hit Korakuen Hall for the first time headlined by the renewal of a classic rivalry.

Aja Kong vs. Meiko Satomura

The result was a bona-fide Match Of The Year Candidate. I saw all the big matches from Mania weekend while I’ve been over here and this topped everything. It also topped the incredible Daisuke Sekimoto main event I saw last week at BJW. Aja Kong looked as good as she did in her prime. Not only was her offence looking fantastic but her selling and the subtle little things she did added so much to the match and made me realise I was watching one of the greatest wrestlers of all time.

However, she was topped by Satomura, who was absolutely heroic as the babyface. Her fire and her execution were on another level from almost anyone I’ve ever seen in person before. I knew she was good, real good, but not this good. Satomura won the match after an epic closing stretch and retained the title. Kong sold the loss, and the damage, brilliantly after the match. It was like Godzilla being taken down, and slumping away to fight another day.

The undercard was a really fun variety show. We had a hard hitting opening tag match, a comedy match, a really good hardcore match pitting Hikaru Shida & Syuri against KAORU & DASH Chisako, and an awesome veteran vs rookie match as Nanae Takahashi defeated hot prospect Chihiro Hashimoto. This show airs on the 16th, and the main event is absolutely must-see stuff.

How to watch & order Dragon Gate live & on-demand iPPVs

Start here on NicoNico. Note there is often a discount for ordering shows early. Korakuen Hall shows are traditionally 1500 points/yen and the big Pay Per Views are at 2160 points/yen for a preorder and 2700 pts/yen day of show.

Overall, the process is very easy:

1- Sign up for a free account. You can Google Translate the page to make it easier, but the registration is fairly standard, so it’s not really needed.

2 – Here’s the Dragon Gate specific page. 1 point = 1 yen. Upcoming shows are down at the bottom.

3 – Go here to buy points. Note that any that you have left over after your purchase can be used the next time.

4 – When you click on the points you want to buy, you’ll be presented with several payment options. As you proceed, it’s the gold buttons with Japanese writing that confirm each step (the grey button is cancel).

5 – Once you’ve bought your points, go back to the show page. Click the big red button near the bottom. That will confirm that you’ve bought the show with X of your Y points, and you have Z left:

6 – You have the ability now to watch live. If you want to “timeshift” it, simply hit the yellow button that says Timeshift which appears on the show page and where the show is listed in your account. This will allow you to watch on demand for a week or so after the event.

7 – To be sure you’ve done everything right, go here. It should look like this: 

That’s all there is to it. It took me about 3 minutes for the whole process and it was very easy. The best news for me is that they have EVERY Dragon Gate show both live and on demand, including all the Korakuens, alll the TVs and all the big shows!

ICYMI: Dragon Gate Tokyo results: Yoshino, Tozawa, Hayashi, Naruki Doi

Submitted by Scott Winter

– From Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan on 12/16

CIMA has been removed from the card due to a minor illness. The rookie Yamamura has been moved into his spot, and now facing Mochizuki in his place will be the always vivacious Yosuke <3 Santa Maria.

T-Hawk vs. Gamma

A match randomly picked by children at the last show. Gamma gained control early and managed a trademark wipe-of-his-saliva all over T-Hawk, but was given a receipt in the form of a brainbuster. He regained the advantage but ate a splash mountain from T-Hawk. T-Hawk going for the Niteride early. An attempted spit in the face of T-Hawk was blocked, as Gamma was hit with a reverse powerslam, but managed to get a couple two counts off a roll up. Despite their efforts, the match reached it’s 5 minute time limit. They shook hands. A draw, then Gamma spit in his face and ran out of the ring. Gross.

Jimmyz (Jimmy “Ryu” Saito & Genki Horiguchi H.A. Gee Mee) vs. VerserK (Mondai Ryu & Cyber Kong)

Genki & Ryu started out trading headlocks. Genki got a dropkick and a kip up. They tagged out, where Kong quickly won a test of strength. Genki back in, but was dropped and nailed with a DiBiase-like falling fist. Jimmyz did manage to regain some momentum with some double teaming on Ryu until Kong interfered. Other members of VerserK smiled in approval from the outside. Ryu mounted Genki in the corner and rubbed his crotch in Genki’s face. Some double teaming from VerserK, but Genki out at two. He attempted a rana, which Kong blocked, but was successful hitting a DDT. Tag into Saito, both Ryu & Saito attempted Saito’s cycling yahoo with Saito finally getting it on a 3rd attempt. More VerserK double teaming left the Jimmyz down, but Saito broke up a two count off a big Kong Frog Splash. Combinations from the Jimmyz now, also ending in a two count being broken up off a Frog Splash. Finally, some VerserK miscommunication led to Saito getting the pin. There appeared to be dissension between the two VerserK members following the match.

Over Generation came out for an in-ring promo after the match. They called a kid into the ring who was wearing their t-shirt.

Big R Shimizu vs. Kaito Ishida

The kid was supposed to ring the bell to start the match, but accidentally jumped the gun prematurely, in a funny bit. Shimizu displayed his power to start, tossing Ishida around the ring. There was a point this year where Big R Shimizu was having a better year than Big E Langston, though it is clear the latter has regained the lead. Ishida attempted chops but was no match for the big man. Ishida is mighty small at this point to come across as a threat. He did slap him in the face twice and nail a missile dropkick for a two however. He connected with kicks, extremely technically sound in doing so. Shimizu regained control and hit the big spinning slam, and a tree slam for two. Ishida managed a nice roll up for a fun two count, but was quickly put down with the Shot-put Chokeslam for a three.

Yosuke <3 Santa Maria vs. Masaaki Mochizuki

No idea why she wasn’t on the card in the first place, as entertaining as anyone on the roster. Yosuke cut a promo before the match, wishing everybody a Merry Christmas and welcomed her opponent to the ring. Mochizuki won in less time than Conor McGregor, and made a beeline for the locker room. Yosuke cut another promo, asking for an immediate rematch, this being a staple of Dragon Gate.

Yosuke <3 Santa Maria vs. Masaaki Mochizuki

Big chops from Yosuke, ducking Mochi’s offense and hitting a dropkick. Then no selling his stuff and showing some athleticism, and hit a gigantic dive to floor, placing her foot on his head in triumph. Awesome. Dragon screw from Yosuke as she is controlling the entire match. Mochi regained control and stiffed her with a gigantic boot in the corner. Two count, but Yosuke fighting back. Huge right hand from Mochi. Yosuke with a sweet spring board dropkick and leg lariat for two. Rather than rub her face in his crotch in a trademark spot, she hit the bonzai drop instead. She ate two boots in return, but showed fight and returned fire with a chop, but was nailed with two more kicks, however kicking out at two. Crowd behind her now, and she hits a suplex.

To the top, but Mochi follows her up there. Superplex but she pops right up! Big kiss and crucifix for an absolutely great two count.  A couple kicks from Mochi and she gets another one.  Another couple nearfalls and the crowd is way into this. Mochi finally gets the three with the Sankakugeri. Mochi led the crowd in applause for Maria Chan after the match. She planted a kiss on him and he reciprocated. This was absolutely everything you want out of pro wrestling, mixing a great match with fun entertainment.

Jimmyz (Jimmy Susumu & Jimmy K-Ness) vs. Dia.HEARTS (Dragon Kid & Kzy)

Susumu was a reindeer here. Kzy & K-Ness started with a few minutes of comedy, well received by the crowd, not so much by their partners. A little bit of action, but the match morphed back into comedy shortly after. Finally something of a match broke out. Double teaming from the Jimmyz, as they maintained control of Kid. Susumu & Kid traded strikes, with Susumu coming out on top. Kid came back with a rana and made the tag to Kzy. Dia.HEARTS now taking it to the Jimmyz, as Kid hits an Ibushi-like moonsault from the second turnbuckle to the floor. Exploder from Susumu for two, on Kzy. Jimmyz lock in duel submissions, firmly in control now.

Double gutbuster into a delayed double suplex combo. Huge Susumu lariat stops a Kzy comeback, for two. Kid to his partner’s aid, and he hits K-Ness with an assisted rana from the top rope. Big Kzy frog splash gets broken up at two by Susumu. Susumu and Kzy to the top now. Exploder from the top on Kzy. K-Ness with his series of spinning rollups on Kid, but broken up by Kzy. Finally, Kid gets the Bible (crucifix) for the win. Funny how your typical average DG midcard tag match is still worlds better than any other company’s standard average midcard tag match. While this was standard fare in DG terms, a forgettable match in reality, it would be the most athletic thing on the entire show of most other companies.

VerserK (Shingo Takagi, Yamato & Kotoka) vs. Over Generation (Eita, Punch Tominaga & Takehiro Yamamura)

Again, no Cima, instead the rookie Yamamura. They brawled into the crowd, while back in the ring Shingo took it to the rook, who was in attire similar to Cima. He tagged out to Punch, who locked up with Yamato. Hands in his pockets for power, Punchy hulked up and was impervious to pain. Kotoka in, and Over Generation put the boots to him. Eita went to work on his right leg, which was taped. We’ll see if that plays into their championship match at the big year-end PPV in a week and a half. Punch in. Big kick to the nuts from Kotoka, with the bad leg which he sold heavily. Yamato returned with a big dropkick, and a stroking of his bangs, as VerserK put a whopping on Punch in their corner. Literally beating on Punch for minutes at a time, double teaming and punking him out in general.

VerserK miscommunication led to a tag Eita came in, a house of fire. Huge dive to the outside wiping out VerserK. Yamamura in, but Shingo manhandled the rookie. Yamamura was evasive however and eventually hit a fisherman suplex for a two. This was more competitive than when Punch was in there. Punch back in there with Yamato who he will be wrestling for the tag titles in a week and a half. Yamato remained in control, but finally Punch got an STO for a two count. Triple dropkick put Shingo on the floor and the faces turned their attention to Kotoka.

Some pretty fantastic triple teaming ending with a PT BME. VerserK regained control shortly after though. Alabama Slam on Eita from the champ got two. The rook in there now, gets nailed from the outside with the suitcase, but it’s only a two. Ref distraction and the whole VerserK squad enters the ring to beat the shit out of Yamamura, but Kaito Ishida (dressed as Yamamura) pulls some twin magic behind the ref’s back, replacing his spent stablemate and Over Generation gets a clever upset. Good match, nice finish.

Monster Express (Masato Yoshino, Akira Tozawa, Shachihoko BOY), Naoki Tanizaki & Kenichiro Arai vs. “El Lindaman” Yuga Hayashi, Naruki Doi, Metal Warrior, Super Shisa & Jimmy Kanda

This was a match, once again, randomly picked by young children on the last show, essentially drawing names out of a hat. The irony being Yoshino, Tozawa & Shach all ended up on the same team. Metal Warrior was beaten down by Gamma before the match and dragged to the locker room and replace by Karaoke Machine #1 (Don Fujii in a mask). The match is supposed to lead to odd pairings but the oddest thing here is VerserK members on opposite sides. We start with Yoshino & Doi, which the crowd pops big for. A very nice exchange of moves and countermoves leaves both at a stalemate, and they go at it again. More technical mastery between the two and the crowd pops again. They tag out. Shach & Machine in there now. But he comidically hurts his knee getting in there and tags out. Tozawa and Shisa going at it now, culminating with Tozawa faking a dive to the floor. Too Easy. Fujii in there now, and he takes on the entire opposition 5-on-1 in a chopfest. Now his own team is in there and it’s 9-on-1. Match settles back down into Tozawa & Lindaman, and Tozawa gets his chops in the corner, and proceeds to punch out all five opposing members, and teammate Tanizaki. Yoshino & Lindaman now trading chops. Yoshino killing him with those.

We then get your standard 180 mile an hour rope running exhibition from Yoshino. Tag into Arai, who shushed the crowd, and hits a headbutt with a sickening thud that resonates throughout the building. So unnecessary, poor friggin’ Hayashi. Everybody going at it now with multiple highflying moves to the floor. Everybody gets in on the act. Tozawa, Shach, Yoshino. Finally Machine, but he throws up an airball. Yoshino & Arai with a nice exchange back in the ring leading to a two count off an Arai dicing headbutt, as this thing is all nonstop action. Tozawa senton on Kanda off the top gets two. He goes for the German but it;s reversed. Doi nails him with a cannonball in the corner. Machine with a chokeslam, broken up. Shisa with the code red but Tozawa escapes. Double teaming from Shach & Tanizaki gets two on Shisa. Lindaman wuith a judo throw. Shisa gets the code red but not a theree. Doi attempts a series of double teams with his squad but misses all four. He leaves. Hilarious. Five-on-four now. Tozawa up top. Brainbuster off the top and Lindaman is down.

Quintuple team in the corner on Lindaman, who gets Germaned by Tozawa and tombstoned by Tanizaki. Machine in though, he breaks it up and now all nine men hit consecutive moves on each other in a frenzy you’ll only see in Dragion Gate. Lindaman with the Locomotion suplex series on Shach gets the win. Second year in a row he gets the big pinfall in the final Korakuen match of the year. Super fun match. After the main event, kids are once again brought in to throw darts at a board, selecting teams for a 10-man tag at the next Korakuen show.

Very fun, well paced show. The three hours just flew by. It’s after 4:30 am and I’m late to work, but it was worth it, the mark of a good show.

Dragon Gate 11-6 iPPV results: Sumoz vs. VeserK All-Out War

Submitted by Scott Winter

– From Korakuen Hall in Tokyo

Dark Match: Yosuke <3 Santa Maria & U-T vs. Dragon Kid & Kzy

Yosuke forgot to shave her armpits tonight. A lovely touch. She would go for her trademark curtsy, but DK would curtsy with her, effectively mocking her. Yes, Yosuke is a her to me. It’s a couple years and the act remains fresh. She slithered around the ring similar to Tonga, only to back her crotch up against the faces of her opponents hanging in the tree of whoa. When the match got serious, the double team maneuvers were spot-on. The kind of balance between strong sport and entertainment that North American companies wish they could produce. Kid went for his handstand knee, only for Yosuke to defend it with a kiss while he stood on his hands. U-T attempted a double team maneuver, missed and accidentally nailed Yosuke. In return, Yosuke almost hit him, but hugged him instead. And then, naturally, french kissed him. The shock and shame caused U-T to get crucifixed by DK for the win.

Akira Tozawa vs. Kaito Ishida

Ishida came out first followed by Over Generation. His cape is far less ridiculous than Lindaman’s. Tozawa came out 10 pounds lighter having dropped the title to Kotoka last week. Ishida chant. He opened with big kicks to Tozawa. Big plancha from the rookie, onto Tozawa on the outside. Back in the ring, Tozawa with the patented closed fist. Ishida made the ropes, fighting out of a Boston crab, young boy style. Tozawa went for the Brainbustah but was countered by Ishida with one of his own. Missle dropkick from Ishida, followed by kicks but Tozawa hulked up and asked for more. Tozawa came back, hitting the rook with big boots and suplexes. Really good final stretch with Tozawa attempting one last German. Finally after much ado, he got it for the victory. Good match, good showing for the kid.

Masaaki Mochizuki & Big R Shimizu vs. Gamma & Takehiro Yamamura

The rookie Yamamura started the match for his team and tagged Mochizuki with a chop early. Mochi returned with a huge kick, but ate a drop kick in return, and then more chops from the kid.The Gammamura team has looked impressive in the past and continued to here, with a good dynamic as a tag team combination. Mochi came back with more chops and a leg lock on the kid, but Gamma dribbled water on his face to break, however he was also sucked into a simultaneousleg lock. More kicks from Mochi but Yamamura fought back made tag. Good stuff with the crowd behind the kid. In the end, Shimizu with the chokeslam for the win. Verserk hit the ring after the match, beat everybody up, and cut promos about being the champs.

Monster Express (Masato Yoshino, T-Hawk & Shachihoko BOY) vs. Over Generation (CIMA, Eita & Lindaman)

I missed the beginning of this. Yoshino, fastest man in wrestling, hit Eita with the quickest offense imaginable. Great triple team work from the men in Orange. Good to see Monster Express strong. They caught a raw deal with Shingo leaving and VerserK really taking off.Hayashi, who is just the best, came in and whooped some ass. Triple planchas from the faces. Two Germans into a Tiger Suplex from Lindaman onto Tiger Fish Boy for the big win, giving OG a nice victory. Yuga Hayashi is friggin’ great.

The Sumos came out before intermission and conducted something of a sumo ceremony mid-ring.

Sumoz vs. VerserK – All Out War #1: Sumo Hagetora (Punch Tominaga) vs. Mondai Ryu

Holy shit, the Sumos have their own theme song, to the melody of “We are Jimmyz”. But rather “We are Sumoz”. This was the friggin’ greatest, for those of us who wondered if they would take the gimmick that far. It’s Ryu vs. Punch, YMMV. Ryu came out like a house of fire, but Punch implored his Matrix based defense. Quick win for Punch here with the PT Kick, in less than 2 minutes. Sumoz winning 1-0.

Sumoz vs. VerserK – All Out War #2: Sumo Susumu, Sumo Kness S.K.S. vs. YAMATO, Kotoka

Sumo chops & Sumo pose from K-Nesuka. Kotoka in, and the BLEEEHS were a plenty. Korakuen not nearly into it as much as the man typing this was. Kotoka now incorporating the moves of fan favorites into modified BLEEEHS. Ok, crowd liked that. Susumu & K-Ness are great as a tag team in Kagetora’s absence, so if they remain Sumoz I can only hope for a little less comedy and more along the lines of their serious Jimmy selves. Susumu in, unable to counter the BLEEEH defense. Kotola got a little too into it and got caught with a top rope exploder.

Yamato back in to elevate the workrate. Nice double teaming from the heels. Gallaria attempt but Susumu yanked Yamato’s trunks into a Sumo g-string form, as a means of defense. Good stuff. Assisted Implant Buster. Susumu & Yamto traded clotheslines, won by Susumu. Heel tactics from Kotoka involving the turnbuckle led to a Gallaria for the pin. Even without Doi, this was pretty good. Tied 1-1.

Sumoz vs. VerserK – All Out War #3: Genki Horiguchi S.U.M.Ooo, Sumo Kanda, Ryo “Sumo” Saito, Sumo Fujii vs. Naruki Doi, Shingo Takagi, Naoki Tanizaki, Cyber Kong

They brawled all over the building to start. Cameras followed Fujii & Yamato, who wasn’t even in the match, throughout the upper deck. Back in the ring, Saito went for some traditional Sumo but was cheapshotted by Cyber Kong. This was not enough to break Saito’s Sumo spirit, however. Eventually a Sumo match spawned. Kong dispersed of three Jimmyz, but got bested by the great Fujii, who then proceeded to put the mack hand down on World Champ Shingo. Triple team from the Sumoz resulted in Fujii chopping Tanizaki’s crotch. Seemed painful.

Match became more of a standard tag, though the heat hadn’t really gone off the charts yet. Cycling Yahoo from all 4 Sumoz resulted in Fujii fumbling through the move, which was pretty funny. Mondai Ryu interfered but Punch took care of him. Horiguchi backslide on Shingo for a hot 2.9. Shingo hit the last falconry in return but that was broken up. All hell broke loose with mass interference and combination maneuvers, ending in Saito hitting his SaiRyo Rocket splash for the win. Big win for the Sumoz.

VerserK cleared the ring after the match and cut promos, despite taking the L. Gamma was called out by Shingo. He proceeded to show up with kendo stick in hand and put a beating on the World Champ, this setting up a Shingo/Gamma title match, a bridge to Shingo vs. CIMA. 20 minutes of promos followed, setting up the next show.

Final Thoughts:

This was a good show, fun show. Nothing over-the-top great wrestling wise, but more like an 80’s episode of NWA Saturday Night, with everything coming across as high energy and keeping the ball rolling for a product that is currently the hottest in the world.

Dragon Gate Japan iPPV Thursday, new merchandise store opening

Dragon Gate will presenting an iPPV from its monthly Korakuen Hall show early Thursday morning.

The show will air at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time Thursday morning, and 2:30 a.m. Pacific, with video-on-demand an option.  It is available at http://live.nicovideo.jp/watch/lv235460088 at a cost of 1,500 yen, or $12.50 U.S.

The promotion is probably the second most popular in Japan and has the fastest action of any group.

The main event will be an Open the Triangle Gate title match with Cima & Gamma & Don Fujii vs. Shingo Takagi & Cyber Kong & Kotoka.

The rest of the card has:

Super Shisa & Shachihoko Boy vs. Lindaman & Yosuke Santa Maria
Masato Yoshino & Akira Tozawa & T-Hawk vs. Dragon Kid & Kzy & Flamita
Jimmy Kanda & Genki Horiguchi vs. Eita & Draztick Boy
Jimmy Susumu & Kaito Ishida vs. Ryo Saito & Takehiro Yamamura
BxB Hulk & Masaaki Mochizuki & Big R Shimizu vs. Yamato & Naruki Doi & Mondai Ryu
Jimmy K-Ness vs. Naoki Tanizaki

There will be an international merchandise store for Dragon Gate merchandise that will be launched later this month.  We will have more details on that in upcoming weeks.