Tiger Mask pulled from GCW Jersey J-Cup match against Dynamite Kid

A rivalry that was set to be reborn will have to wait a bit longer as Tiger Mask will no longer appear as part of this Friday’s GCW Jersey J-Cup action.

Tiger Mask was set to face the new “Dynamite Kid” Tommy Billington in Jersey City, New Jersey, in a revival of the legendary feud between the original Tiger Mask and the original Thomas Billington.

However, “due to a personal emergency, Tiger Mask will no longer be able to travel to the US for the GCW/JCW Jersey J-Cup. We will be doing everything in our power to reschedule his match with Tommy Billington as soon as possible on a GCW/JCW event in the region.”

Billington will now face Black Tiger IV (Rocky Romero) on Friday while Billington will team with Joey Janela against Gabe Kidd and Mad Dog Connelly on Saturday.

Yoshihiro Yamazaki — who has portrayed Tiger Mask since 1995 — is set to retire from the ring in July 2026. Originally played by Satoru Sayama, the character debuted in 1981 with a victory over Billington’s uncle and the original Dynamite Kid, Thomas Billington. The two then had a series of matches and a feud that set a new standard for wrestling.

“We apologize for this unavoidable change and are dedicating to presenting the best show possible,” the promotion wrote.

Tiger Mask to face Dynamite Kid in GCW Jersey J-Cup

Game Changer Wrestling is calling back to one of pro wrestling’s greatest-ever rivalries.

The indie promotion has announced that Tiger Mask IV will debut for them in February 2026, facing off against “Dynamite Kid” Tommy Billington in the first round of the Jersey J-Cup. GCW and its sister promotion Jersey Championship Wrestling are presenting the two-night tournament in Jersey City, New Jersey on February 6-7, 2026.

Originally played by Satoru Sayama, the Tiger Mask character debuted in 1981 with a victory over Billington’s uncle Dynamite Kid (Thomas Billington). Sayama and Dynamite Kid had a series of matches that set a new standard for junior heavyweight wrestlers and has influenced every generation since.

Yoshihiro Yamazaki — who has portrayed Tiger Mask since 1995 — is set to retire from the ring in July 2026.

Tommy Billington is under contract with AEW and competes in both AEW & ROH. His tag team partner Adam Priest is among the other Jersey J-Cup entrants, with Jonathan Gresham, Travis Williams, Judas Icarus, Jordan Oliver, Alec Price, Man Like Dereiss, and Erick Stevens also set.

White Eagle Hall in Jersey City is hosting both nights of the junior heavyweight tournament.

Dynamite Kid’s nephew to make AEW debut on Collision

One of the nephews of the late Dynamite Kid will make his AEW debut on Saturday’s Collision. 

Billed as “Dynamite Kid” Tommy Billington, the nephew of the late junior heavyweight British Bulldogs star will debut for AEW on Saturday, May 11 on Collision in Vancouver against Dax Harwood in singles competition. 

AEW’s Tony Khan announced the bout for Saturday in a social media post Wednesday night: 

Tommy made his pro debut in 2018 and primarily works Canadian indies, but has also worked with brother Mark as the Billington Bulldogs. 

As a tag team, Tommy and Mark have toured the UK, and also worked for MLW in 2022 & 2023, with MLW announcing that they had signed the duo to contracts. They have not wrestled for MLW since January 2023. 

Billington vs. Harwood, Adam Copeland vs. Kyle O’Reilly for the TNT title, plus Bryan Danielson in action have now been announced for Saturday’s Collision. 

Collision will air on TBS this Saturday at 8 p.m. Eastern time, followed by a live Rampage at 10 p.m. Eastern. 

The announced card for Saturday: 

  • TNT Champion Adam Copeland defends against Kyle O’Reilly
  • Bryan Danielson in action
  • Dax Harwood vs. “Dynamite Kid” Tommy Billington 

Observer Flashback: Death of Dynamite Kid

Tom Billington, better known to wrestling fans as Dynamite Kid, passed away five years ago on this date, which also happened to be his 60th birthday.

Inside the ring, he was one of the most influential wrestlers of all time. His legacy outside the ring is far more complicated, however.

Billington’s life and career were covered by Dave Meltzer in the December 10, 2018 edition of The Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Meltzer included in the issue a statement from Bret Hart about the influence Billington had on his career.

“There are people in life that have a ripple effect both professionally and personally,” said Bret Hart. “Tom `Dynamite Kid’ Billington was one of those people. The second professional wrestling match of my career was against Dynamite. I benefitted from his greatness and through our matches in Stampede, WWE and everywhere in between, I became a better wrestler because of him. Dynamite truly was the best wrestler ever, pound-for-pound. Tom was family, my brother-in-law, and we were very close. In many ways, I felt like one of the few people who truly knew him, both the good and the bad. I saw Tom one final time this past June in England, and I can only hope that he is finally at peace. My thoughts are with his children, Bronwyne, Marek, and Amaris, and the entire Billington family.”

Meltzer’s obituary also covered some of Billington’s most notable contributions to professional wrestling, such as his rivalry in Japan with Tiger Mask.

Meltzer wrote:

Tiger Mask and Dynamite Kid go together like Peanut Butter & Jelly, Magic and Bird, Ali and Frazier, Evert and Navratilova. You say one and it immediately brings up the thought of the other.

In a poll nearly 35 years after their heyday in Japan when TV Asahi did a network special asking the public who the greatest pro wrestler of all-time was, Tiger Mask was voted third, and the reason was his matches with Dynamite Kid.

Billington’s career and physical health declined considerably following a back injury he suffered when he was just 28 years old. At the time of his passing, he had been confined to a wheelchair for over 20 years.

Meltzer continued:

He was confined to a wheelchair before he was 40. From that point, while his matches stood the test of time, he was largely forgotten, a recluse in England, not wanting to see hardly anyone or be seen. Whatever news would come out about him was never good. It was mostly health problems, whether it be hospitalizations, seizures, part of his leg being amputated, a stroke in 2013 and heart problems.

Unfortunately, no history of Dynamite Kid’s career would be complete without also mentioning what Meltzer described as his “sadistic behavior” backstage.

He created a reign of terror in Stampede Wrestling and WWF when he was there, whether getting into fights himself, or setting up others to fight for his amusement, practical jokes that were sometimes amusing but often cruel.

Dave Meltzer’s full article on the passing of Tom “Dynamite Kid” Billington can be read here.

Next Generation Billington Family

Today, Dynamite Kid’s nephews (Mark & Thomas Billington) wrestle as the Billington Bulldogs. They’ve performed for promotions such as RevPro and Calgary’s Dungeon Wrestling, where they hold the promotion’s tag titles. They’ve also wrestled for DEFY and MLW.

Dynamite Kid’s daughter Bronwyne Billington has performed as a valet under the name Dynamite Doll. She also keeps an active social media profile and frequently posts news clippings and other media about her father.

The December 10, 2018, Observer Newsletter also covers Vince McMahon bringing back the XFL, Greg Hardy debuting in the UFC, and WWE scrambling to change plans after a broken nose and concussion took Becky Lynch off of Survivor Series the month before. The entire issue is available in our archives for subscribers.

Subscribers can click here to read the December 10, 2018, Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

WOR: Dynamite Kid, SummerSlam & Survivor Series, Claressa Shields

Photo via New Japan’s website

Dave Meltzer and I are back with Wrestling Observer Radio. We look at all the recent news such as the latest on SummerSlam and Survivor Series, Aleister Black and where he will end up, Bill Eadie, Kenny Omega, Triple H’s conference call, Claressa Shields’ fight for the PFL, UFC 263, and the Mayweather/Paul buyrate. 

We then look at the Dark Side of the Ring on the Dynamite Kid as well as the current back issue from 2004 with a story that relates to the documentary. 

Check out our new Facebook Group for those of you interested in attending any F4W meetups, including the 2022 F4W Convention.

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Portland Wrestlecast: Dynamite Kid in the Pacific Northwest

You know Dynamite Kid from England, Japan, Calgary and the WWF, but do you know he also had a run in Portland and Don Owen’s territory?

Not only was he a former Pacific Northwest Heavyweight and tag team champion, he played a key role in one of the most famous angles in Portland Wrestling history: the babyface turn of “Playboy” Buddy Rose in 1983. 

In this edition of the Portland Wrestlecast, I talk with Rich Patterson, a longtime friend of Buddy and the man who is responsible for saving all of his video collection. They look back on how and why the Kid came to Portland, his short time teaming with Buddy, his affiliation with Rip Oliver and his Clan, injuring a young Curt Hennig and Dynamite’s thoughts on Portland, Buddy, Don, and Billy Jack Haynes.

While Dynamite’s time in Portland was less than a year, it was a key part of the territory’s history. While you may know a lot about the career of Dynamite Kid, this show has part of his history that you may not have heard.

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December 10, 2018 Observer Newsletter: Death of Dynamite Kid

The legacy of the Dynamite Kid is a complex one to digest.

Perhaps the most succinct way of putting it came from Julie Hart, his former sister-in-law, who one day told me, “Really, he was the best wrestler there ever was,” said Hart, who saw more than her share of great wrestling and was the wife of Bret Hart. “And as great as he was as a wrestler, he was every bit as miserable of a human being.”

Realistically, when you watch pro wrestling in 2018, the thing you realize is that when it comes to in-ring wrestling, the modern style that combines some American style with old British, Lucha Libre and Japanese style had its primitive and most influential roots in the 1981-83 matches between Tiger Mask and the Dynamite Kid.

The two only had a handful of singles matches, all but one in Japan, but every match was a classic that lived on through videotapes, and was really the first of the classic videotape feuds.

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Tom ‘Dynamite Kid’ Billington passes away at 60 years old

Tom Billington, known in professional wrestling as the Dynamite Kid, has passed away at 60 years old.

Billington’s death was announced by Marty Jones and has been confirmed by WWE. Today was Billington’s 60th birthday.

The cause of Billington’s death has yet to be reported. He’s been confined to a wheelchair since 1997 and has had a long history of both health and personal problems.

Billington is considered one of the most influential in-ring wrestlers of all time, wrestling in the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States, and Japan. His famous series of matches with Tiger Mask helped revolutionize the junior heavyweight style, and he was a one-time WWF Tag Team Champion as the British Bulldogs with Davey Boy Smith. They won the titles from Brutus Beefcake & Greg Valentine at WrestleMania II.

Billington was inducted into the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame as part of its inaugural class in 1996.

Davey Boy Smith Jr. (Harry Smith) tweeted: “It deeply saddens me to announce the passing of Tom Billington the ‘Dynamite Kid.’ I was really happy and glad I got to see Dynamite one last time last June in the UK. . Dynamite was certainly an inspiration to myself and many others and really revolutionized Professional Wrestling as we now it today. He flew high, and gave it his all every match. Thanks for everything and sad to have lost another family member. Rest In Peace Dyno.”

November 15, 1999 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: ECW November to Remember review, Dynamite Kid book, more

After what is billed as its showcase event of the year, Paul Heyman’s Extreme Championship Wrestling seems to have settled into a niche where it looks less likely than ever to achieve status as a truly competitive No. 3 office. In the same breath, it also appears to have survived the financial problems early in the year that threatened to put it out of business.

It is a very distant third national promotion. Its TV ratings on its best day come reasonably close to WCW’s lowest rated show on its worst day. Its PPV on its best day come close to WCW’s lowest rated PPV in its history. In its best cities, it can draw close to, on a good day what WCW, when it recently hit rock bottom, did at its lowest. It has some good wrestlers, but for whatever reason, with the exception of a few, they are people that the big two don’t seem to want. It has changed wrestling and pioneered the more sex-driven presentation that has put WWF’s popularity through the roof. But someone else is deriving the gold from its concepts.

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