Josh Barnett explains why Bloodsport is ending & won’t return under another name

After making the surprise announcement Friday that he was ending his Bloodsport series, Josh Barnett went into further details as to why, confirming that it’s not a hiatus and is “closed unless something is done to get us where we need to go.”

Appearing on The Ariel Helwani Show Monday, Barnett said there was no tragedy or bad thing that caused him to make the decision but that in order to go forward with his vision, Bloodsport would need more capital, more employees and an office — more than an indie promotion and a lot less than WWE or AEW to be fully realized for how he views it.

“For me, Bloodsport had an evolution of where it was trying to get to, and we’re just not there—we’re not close. For me, it was better to end it now than to keep going and, quite possibly, diminish what the product is,” he said.

He said he had been considering the shutdown for quite sometime and something he had thought “very deeply and heavily about.” He had looked at sponsors “and some outside elements to help with building toward the ultimate example is. We weren’t able to do it,” he said, joking about a nice pitch deck he made for that effort.

“I had a timeline and we didn’t meet those goals,” he said.

He said when he made the announcement, he wasn’t trying to make a big deal out of it and didn’t want it to come off as a gimmick or to be insincere. He admitted to conflicting feelings in his own heart about whether that was going to be the case or not, but “I feel like I made the right choice.”

Asked if Bloodsport could go on without him, he shut that down quickly, saying it wouldn’t be revived under any other name, noting “It’s my show, my concept.”

He also said WWE had no influence in how their talent is booking on his shows and that both Paul Levesque and Nick Khan want their talent to get better and to get reps. He said he was backstage for Saturday’s WrestleMania 42 card.

Josh Barnett announces he is ending GCW Bloodsport ‘for the foreseeable future’

After nine years and 18 events, Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport is taking a break.

Barnett revealed the news during Friday’s event in Las Vegas as part of WrestleMania week after his win over Yugi Nagata in the main event. He ran down their accomplishments, said they had done some amazing things, “but for now, this door is closing.”

The former UFC heavyweight champion said is “shutting shop and calling it a day” while they have their dignity and that fans still love what they do. He put over GCW owner Brett Lauderdale’s efforts.

Barnett said he has his reasons for shutting things down and while Bloodsport is not done forever, it’s done “for the foreseeable future.” He thanked the wrestlers, Lauderdale and the fans before bidding adieu.

The no ropes worked shoot style debuted as Matt Riddle’s Bloodsport in April 2018 with Barnett taking over the franchise a year later. Since then, GCW has run Bloodsport events from New Jersey to Indiana to Los Angeles to Tokyo to New York City to London and more.

The shows brought wrestlers from all organizations at one point including WWE, AEW, TNA, NJPW and others.

Barnett spoke to me in 2019 about the Bloodsport concept and why he initially got involved which you can listen to for free here.

GCW Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV live results: Barnett vs. Nagata, Baszler vs. Nattie

GCW Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV takes place today in Las Vegas.

The show is set to start at 3 p.m. local time / 6 p.m. Eastern from the Horseshoe Las Vegas.

Ten matches are scheduled for the card, including Josh Barnett vs. Yuji Nagata and Nattie Neidhart vs. Shayna Baszler.

Also scheduled to compete are Pete Dunne, Miyu Yamashita, Janai Kai, Zack Sabre Jr., Erik Stevens, Royce Isaacs, Timothy Thatcher, Charlie Dempsey, and more. The show will air on Triller as part of The Collective.

The full lineup for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV is below.

  • Pete Dunne vs. Masashi Takeda
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Ulka Sasaki vs. Joe Dashou
  • Angel Verduzco vs. Matt Mako
  • Royce Isaacs vs. Shane Mercer
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ray Jaz
  • Nattie Neidhart vs. Shayna Baszler
  • Erick Stevens vs. Fuminori Abe
  • Josh Barnett vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Miyu Yamashita vs. Janai Kai

Our live coverage begins at 6 p.m. Eastern.

**************

And 6pm it is! Welcome to Bloodsport! This will be my first event of this kind, so thanks for coming along to keep me safe. I’ve been told that JCVD will not be making an appearance or dancing, which is a shame, but the Nattie/Baszler match should more than make up the for the disappointment.

So, if you’re new here like me, Bloodsport is simple: No ropes, no ring, and matches can only end by knockout or submission. There is a ten count and fighters must allow their opponent to get back into the ring. Also, no low blows, no foreign objects and various time limits. The fights can also end in draws. t’s truly an unique combination of wrestling, ufc and shoot fighting and I’m excited to get into it!

The show began with an apropriate nu-metal assisted opening package showing highlights from tonight’s participants from previous Bloodsports and it was hardcore enough that my parental settings kicked in. That might not be true, but it was still pretty cool.

The room was the same one from last nights Mark Hitchcock Tribute Supershow, but with the ropes removed from the ring at the center of the ballroom. All of the fighters on the card were introduced and entered off the top, which was something I’ve never seen before and was really cool.

The man who’s name is on the show, Josh Barnett grabbed a mic and handed it to Charlie Dempsey. The mic was cutting in and out, but Dempsey played up the violent nature of the night while doing a little crowd work. Barnett jumped in and demanded Bloodsport start right now!

Matt Mako vs. Angel Verduczo

They felt each other out with some shin kicks and quick strikes with Verduzco getting the first take down with a northern lights style slam. Mako countered though with a triangle choke. Verduczo got out of it and they reset.

Mako threw some knees into Verduczo’s gut, allowing him to put an armbar on. Verduczo countered into an ankle lock, which Mako got out of. Mako went for some high kicks, working the body. Verduczo hit a slam, but Mako turned it into a kimura lock with a leg stretch. Verduczo pushed his way out of it and laid in a little ground n pound.

Verduczo caught a kick from Mako and turned it into a fisherman’s suplex. He put Mako in a half crab, trying to get Mako to submit. Verduczo bridged the hold, but that gave Mako an opening to put on a Muta lock. Verduczo got out of it and the two started throwing hands.

Mako took one on the chin, staggering him for a moment. He came back with a spin kick and suplex. He climbed on top of Verduczo and started punching, causing the ref to stop the match and award the win to Mako via TKO.

Match Result: Matt Mako defeated Angel Verduczo via TKO

Ulka Sasaki vs. Joe Dashou

London, Ontario’s Dashou lured Sasaki in with a promise of a handshake then suplexed him to start the match. Sasaki came back with some strikes, but Dashou took him down. They rolled through with Sasaki looking for a submission but couldn’t get it locked in.

They reset and Sasaki threw some kicks. Dashou hit another takedown, but Sasaki counterd with a brief triangle choke. Dashou got a front headlock on, trying to work it into a choke. Sasaki rolled him over though and threw some haeavy strikes.

Dashou wanted to keep things on the mat and the two rolled around trying to get headlocks on. Sasaki got up and threw a kick or two, followed by some knees. Dashou muscled him over though into another takedown. Sasaki went for a cross armbreaker, but Dashou worked it into a leg lock before they separated.

Dashou got an arm throw takedown off of some Sasaki strikes. Sasaki put a high knee right into Dashou’s face while he was on his knees and Dashou crumpled like he’d been hit by a mallet. The ref declared Sasaki the winner and they shook hands.

Match Result: Ulka Sasaki defeated Joe Dashou via TKO

Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ray Jaz

Sabre did a little taunting off the top, but when the bell rang it was Ja who got the first take down in a spinebuster type move. Sabre took him down with an armdrag, but Jaz got out of it. He threw Sabre to the mat and tried to get a choke on, but Sabre countered with a leg scissor.

Jaz took back momentum, trying to work in a banana split hold, but Sabre transitioned it into an armbar. Jaz countered with a knee and threw Sabre with a suplex into an armbar. He couldn’t quite lock it in and Sabre stacked him up and went for a leg torque.

They wrestled around trying to get a lock of some kind on one another. Eventually Sabre got up and backed away, taking a moment to reset. Jaz took him down and tried a leg lock, but Sabre transitioned out of it untl Jaz put on a cross armbreaker.

Sabre worked it into a knee bar, but Jaz wrapped his arms around his back with a wristlock. Jaz threw a belly to bell suplex to try and catch Sabre off guard, but Sabre was able to hold off all the subsequent hold attempts.

They reset again, with Sabre looking like he was starting to wear down. Jaz got him up for a flapjack, but Sabre managed to transition it into a leg choke and Jaz was forced to tap out.

Match Result: Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Ray Jaz via submission

Miyu Yamashita vs. Janai Kai

Both of these wormen are known strikers, so opening the match with a flurry of kicks wasn’t a shock. Yamashita took the first fall off a punch from Kai. She got back up and managed to take Kai down, looking for a headlock.

Kai fought back and the two returned to trading shin and midsection kicks. Kai cought one from Ymashita and took her to the mat. They shoved each other off and reset, this time with Kai landing the majority of the body kicks. She missed one though and Yamashita was able to take her to the mat.

They rolled around until Kai snuck in a few arm strikes. Kai put on a front neck lock, trying to work it into a choke, and then put on a Dragon Sleeper. Yamashita was able to work out of it and start putting knees to Kai’s head. Kai grabbed a suplex and hit two thrust kicks, sending Yamashita off the mat. Yamashita made it back in at a 9 count and ate a big shot from Kai.

Yamashita threw a spin kick, but missed and Kai hit her with one of ther own. Yamashita landed a nasty kick to Kai’s head and Kai crumpled to the mat, forcing the ref to call the match for Yamashita.

Match Result: Miyu Yamashita defeated Janai Kai via TKO

Shane Mercer vs. Royce Isaacs

Isaacs has the most Bloodsport appearances of any fighter not named Josh Barnett. Mercer seems like the kind of guy who really likes Spawn comics, but I’ll let that slide. He did have the cooler of the two poses.

This was a bruiser affair from the start, with Isaacs getting the first takedown. He tried to get a leg lock on, but Mercer countered with a waist lock. They split up and Isaacs turned to strikes to try and wear Mercer down. Mercer got the takedown though and they struggled to get submission holds on each other.

Isaacs caught a Mercer kick off of a reset and took him down for some head strikes. They put on duelling ankle locks, with Isaacs giving his up first to throw a couple of knees into Mercer’s gut. Isaacs put on a rear choke, but Mercer rolled out of it and Isaacs laid some sharp elbows onto his dome.

Mercer threw some short forearms and Isaacs got on top, trying to deliver some ground and pound. Isaacs stepped out of the ring to take a breath and came back in, again looking for a waist lock. Mercer blocked it, but Isaacs hoisted him up in a suplex.

Isaacs put Mercer in a knee bar, but Mercer threw some kidney kicks to get out of it. Mercer went for a takedown and turned it into a suplex. He got a chinlock on Isaacs and then threw him backwards in a fallaway slam that seemed to hit his own head harder than Issacs.

Issacs took advantage and put a wistlock on before a cradle suplex. He rained down elbows and put on a reverse armbar. Mercer almost tapped and Isaacs cinched it down harder. Mercer worked out of it and threw Isaacs in a firemans carry slam, into a rear choke.

Isaacs stood up and hit a Death Valley Driver into a sleeper hold, forcing Mercer to tap out.

Match Result: Royce Isaacs defeated Shane Mercer via submission

Masashi Takeda vs. Pete Dunne

I’ve been a huge fan of Dunne for years, so watching him get back to his bruiserwieght ways is pretty exciting. Takeda has filed his teeth to look like that of a shark. Bloodsport is awesome.

Dunne threw his towel at Takeda to start the match which set the tone. Dunne continued the mind games after the bell, but it was Takeda who got the first takedown. He tried a rear choke, but settled for a waist scissor. Dunne worked through it and rolled Takeda into an armbreaker.

They locked up with Dunne getting a forearm takedown, driving his elbow into Takeda’s head. He popped back up though, throwing kicks at Dunne. Dunne tried to go low, but Takeda had it scouted and countered it into a choke. Dunne started throwing back elbows, but Takeda wouldn’t give up.

Dunne worked into a side control position, looking for a chance to break some fingers, but Takeda got a headscissor in instead. Dunne threw a stomp and put on a front quarter nelson hold. Takeda reversed it into a double wristlock.

The two traded strikes and got back on their feet, the match devolving into a brawl. Dunne fought back, but fell to his knees off an open strike from Takeda. Takeda put on an arm bar, but Dunne countered into a rear chinlock. Takeda threw him off with an exploder suplex.

They went back to brawling with Dunne getting some strikes in before Takeda absolutely belted him. Dunne responded with a vicious kick and Takeda took him down for some scrambling strikes and knees. Dunne started to fade, but managed to grab Takeda in a triangle choke with elbows on the side.

Dunne bent Takeda’s hand back and that was all he could take. Takeda tapped out and the match was over.

Match Result: Pete Dunne defeated Masashi Takeda via submission

Erick Stevens vs. Fuminori Abe

Stevens was aggressive off the top but Abe was able to avoid what he was throwing. Stevens eventually got a takedown, rolling through and looking for an opening. Stevens didn’t give him one though, until Abe put on a stepover toe hold into a face lock.

Stevens rolled out of it and transitioned into a cross armbreaker. Abe wasn’t able to step over and Stevens tightened his grip. Abe rolled through several times, but couldn’t shake the hold. Abe went for a leg lock, but Stevens just slapped him about it.

Stevens threw a head butt and Abe sent one right back, but he seemed to get the worst of it. Stevens started bleeding, but managed to get a heel hook and grapevine Abe’s leg. He locked in a cross face and pulled back.

Abe managed to counter into his own cross armbar, but Stevens was able to push him off and throw forearms into Abe’s face. He started to bleed profusely as Stevens put on a sleeper choke. Abe went for the eyes of Stevens and reversed the hold, but Stevens recovered quickly and got to his feet.

Abe wrapped Stevens up in an octopus, but Stevens threw him off and worked the arm. Abe was able to stand and stomp on Stevens’ head, but Stevens was able to counter it into a reverse sleeper hold. He dragged Abe to his feet and Abe tried another head butt.

Abe sent Stevens to the mat and crushed his face with a headbutt. The ref stopped the match and awarded the win to Abe.

Match Result: Fuminori Abe defeated Erick Stevens via referee stoppage

Timothy Thatcher vs. Charlie Dempsey

Thatcher and Dempsey tied up with Thatcher taking control. He wasn’t able to get ahold of Dempsey who worked him into an ankle lock. He bridged over, twisting Thatcher’s leg, but Thatcher rolled over and returned the favor by driving his knees in to Dempsey’s back.

Dempsey countered it and went for Thatcher’s arm but Thatcher was waiting and twisted Dempsey’s shoulders around, trying to get him to the mat. Dempsey kicked his way out of it and they took a second to reset.

Thatcher went back to the arm but left himself open for a side slam from Dempsey. They strugged to get the upper hand on one another until Thatcher worked Dempsey into an ankle lock. Dempsey countered with a crossface and Thatcher threw him off and drove his knee into Dempsey’s nose.

Dempsey managed to fight his way into an armbar/armbreaker on Thatcher, who managed to fight out of it and put ona half crab. Dempsey countered it into a leg lock, but Thatcher tried to pull himself out of it using the ring edge.

Dempsey didn’t let up though and twisted Thatcher into a surfboard position. They both transitioned into strikes and Dempsey hit a gut wrench suplex. Thatcher came back though with a twisting arm lock and pulled Dempsey’s leg backwards at the same time.

Dempsey rolled it over into a double wristlock, but couldn’t get it behind the back. Thatcher rolled them over and threw some hard forearms before twisting Dempsey back into the single leg crab. Dempsey managed to grab an ankle and get out of it, using a headlock takedown to bring Thatcher to the mat.

Thatcher hit a big uppercut, but Dempsey shook it off and hit a dragonscrew leg whip. Dempset put an ankle lock on Thatcher and trasitioned into a head lock. Thatcher dug down deep and flipped Dempsey off with a suplex. Dremsey threw a big forearm and Thatcher rolled out of the ring.

He made it back in before 10 and resumed throwing uppercuts. Dempsey hit a German suplex into a chicken wing, driving his elbow into Thatcher’s head. Dempsey put on a crossface and Thatcher was forced to tap.

Match Result: Charlie Dempsey defeated Timothy Thatcher via submission

Nattie Neidhart vs. Shayna Baszler

This is the match that I’ve been looking forward to all evening. Both of these women are undefeated in Bloodsport and this is going to be a f-i-g-h-t.

Neidhart got into Baszler’s face before the introductions even happened, which whipped the crowd into a frenzy. Nattie went around back, but Baszler wasble to take her down. They threw a few strikes and then reset.

Nattie got a headlock takedown but Baszler rolled through and shoved her off. Nattie went back to the neck, but Baszler worked her around. They reset with Baszler sitting down and inviting Nattie to come and get her. Nattie did and put her in an ankle lock.

The two traded strikes while trying to set in a lock. Nattie put on a lag lock, but Baszler poked her eye and feigned putting on the sharpshooter. That mad Nattie mad and she punched Baszler in the face. Baszler stepped on Nattie’s fingers and then threw a knee right into her head.

Nattie came back with a suplex and then a double leg takedown. Baszler stopped Nattie from putting on a figure four, but couldn’t break the toe hold. Nattie rolled it over and managed to put a sharpshooter on, draggin Baszler to the center of the ring. Baszler countered out of it into a rear clutch.

Nattie stepped over and put on a choke of her own. Baszler tried to throw her off, but Nattie transistioned to strikes to the back of her head. Baszler was busted the hell open as she stood up with Nattie still holding the sleeper.

Baszler threw herself and Nattie off the ring into the audience, kocking the first row apart. Baszler looked like her nose was broken as Nattie went to get back into the ring. Baszler grabbed her from behind though and Nattie kicked backwards, sending her into the steps.

Nattie scrambled back into the ring to beat the count, but Baszler wasn’t able to get there in time, costing her the match.

Match Result: Nattie Neidhart defeated Shayna Baszler by countout.

After the match, Nattie and Baszler brawled in the ring until both of their entourages broke up the melee.

Yuji Nagata vs. Josh Barnett

The Main Event of the night pitted two big strikers in Barnett and Nagata against each other with a hot crowd. These two have faced off before and it was apparent off the top as they traded counters and strikes.

Nagata got a leg lock on Barnett, but he transitioned it into a wasitlock. Nagata rolled through though, looking for an armbar. Barnett stopped him from locking it in and the two separated for a reset.

They tied up with Barnett getting a takedown into an armbar. Nagata got out of it and wrapped Barnett’s arm around his own, looking for an arm breaker. Barnett countered and went into a sitting crossface, causing Nagata to start bleeding early.

Nagata countered back into an arm hold, trying to lock in the breaker, but Barnett held him off. Barnett drove his knee into Nagata’s ankle, causing a hold break. They started trading kicks, Barnett going high and Nagata going low.

Nagata transitioned a crossface into a rear choke as the five minute mark passed. Barnett tried to get out, but Nagata went back to the arm breaker. Barnett rolled through and used the momentum to break the hold and put on his own body lock.

Barnett cinched down on the sleeper hold, but Nagata tucked his chin and got out of it. The separated and Barnett went for a hip throw, but faked Nagata out into a leg lock. He wrenched back as Nagata screamed and tried to roll out of it.

Barnett wouldn’t loosen up though and Nagata managed to roll out of the ring to catch his breath. The count started and Nagata used 9 seconds then got back in the ring. Barnett met him there with a single leg takedown, twisting Nagata’s achilles.

Nagata rolled out it though, throwing a few stomps for good measure. Nagata threw Barnett with an exploder and then clocked him with a spinning heel kick. Nagata threw another suplex, dropping Barnett on his head as ten minutes expired.

Nagata put on a crossface and twisted Barnett’s neck. Barnett kicked through and broke the hold, but not before turning beet red from lack of oxygen. Nagata went for a high kick but Barnett caught his foot and twisted him into an stf.

Nagata kicked him off and blocked a German suplex into an armbar and then a fujiwara. Nagata pulled back on Barnett’s arm, but Barnett countered it and they went back to trading strikes. Nagata went for a kick, but Barnett blocked it and sent him to the mat with a lariat.

Barnett threw Nagata with a front suplex, but Nagata got right back up and they started trading forearms. Barnett landed a perfect heel kick and knocked Nagata to the mat. The Ref called the match after checking Nagata, giving Barnett the win.

Match Result: Josh Barnett defeated Yuji Nagata via TKO

After the match, Barnett got on the mic and thanked Nagata. He thanked the audience and said that the fighters in Bloodsport want to be there and that means a lot. Barnett then shocked the audience and announced that this would be the last Bloodsport.

He thanked the team behind Bloodsport and said that he was ending Bloodsport while it still had it’s integrity. He wasn’t saying that it would never be back, but for now this is it. He thanked everyone again and left the ring.

Tokyo Dome main event rematch booked for Bloodsport

We have a main event for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport—and it’s a rematch of Josh Barnett’s pro wrestling debut.

Twenty-three years after they battled for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship at NJPW Wrestling World in the Tokyo Dome, Barnett and Yuji Nagata will be meeting again. Their first match, Barnett’s first in a worked environment, came less than a year after he had won the UFC Heavyweight Championship.

Nagata won that contest in somewhat controversial fashion. He pinned Barnett after hitting a wrist-clutch exploder and a jumping reverse roundhouse kick to the head, but Barnett then immediately rolled over and locked Nagata in a crossface, seemingly unaware the match could end via pinfall.

There will be no such finish in Bloodsport, where there are no pins, and matches can only end via submission, knockout, or referee stoppage.

Barnett and Nagata have not had a singles match since then, though they have met in tag team matches, both as opponents and as partners, in 2003 and 2004. They were also both in the Ranbo at Wrestle Kingdom in 2025, which was eventually won by Hirooki Goto.

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV airs on Triller TV live from the Horseshoe in Las Vegas on Friday, April 17. Tickets are available here. The card announced so far:

  • Masashi Takeda vs. Pete Dunne
  • Timothy Thatcher vs. Charlie Dempsey
  • Joe Dashou vs. Ulka Sasaki
  • Angel Verduzco vs. Matt Mako
  • Royce Isaacs vs. Shane Mercer
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ray Jaz
  • Erick Stevens vs. Fuminori Abe
  • Shayna Baszler vs. Nattie Neidhart
  • Miyu Yamashita vs. Janai Kai
  • Yuji Nagata vs. Josh Barnett

Nattie vs. Shayna Baszler added to Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV

A new match is official for the next Bloodsport card.

It was confirmed on Friday that Nattie would face former WWE wrestler Shayna Baszler on April 17. On social media, Nattie asked Baszler to bring the version of herself that was feared in the WWE locker room.

“I want you to bring me the killing machine Shayna,” Nattie wrote. “Bring me the most feared woman ever in the WWE locker room. Bring me the MMA pioneer who men and women knew to avoid. I know I’m on borrowed time, if I don’t deliver, then back comes the sparkles, back comes the Bimbo. I’m marching into your match, in your world, Shayna. And I’m coming to f*** you up.”

Nattie previously competed at last year’s Bloodsport that took place during WrestleMania weekend, where she defeated Miyu Yamashita. 

Baszler was released from her WWE contract last year, but continues to make appearances on their television and has worked at the WWE Performance Center. Most recently, she was seen training Kelani Jordan in her match against Lola Vice that took place at NXT Vengeance Day earlier this month.

Two matches added to Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV

The card for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV is starting to take shape with a couple of new matches added.

Barnett revealed two new additions to the lineup today, announcing that Ulka Sasaki vs. Joe Dashou and Angel Verduzco vs. Matt Mako will take place at the WrestleMania week indie show. It’s set for April 17 and will be broadcast live on TrillerTV+ with a start time of 3 p.m. Pacific/6 p.m. Eastern.

Sasaki — a NOAH wrestler and former MMA fighter — is currently on excursion to the United States and training at the WWE Performance Center. Along with that training, he’s wrestled at some NXT house shows. This will be his Bloodsport debut.

Dashou and Verduzco both have experience competing in and coaching amateur-style wrestling. In pro wrestling, Dashou is a graduate of the NJPW dojo.

The Bloodsport card now has four officially announced matches:

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XV (Friday, April 17) —

  • Pete Dunne vs. Masashi Takeda
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Ulka Sasaki vs. Joe Dashou
  • Angel Verduzco vs. Matt Mako
  • Also set to compete: Josh Barnett, Nattie, Zack Sabre Jr., Yuji Nagata, Shayna Baszler, Erick Stevens, Fuminori Abe, Ray Jaz, Royce Isaacs, Miyu Yamashita

Josh Barnett match announced for Bloodsport: London

Josh Barnett is set to face off against a fellow MMA veteran at his next Bloodsport event.

It was announced today that Barnett vs. Oli Thompson will be part of the card for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport: London on September 28. The show — which is the latest MMA-inspired pro wrestling event from Game Changer Wrestling and Barnett — is taking place at the Electric Ballroom and will air live on TrillerTV+.

Thompson is making his Bloodsport debut in the match. Nicknamed “The Spartan,” he is from the United Kingdom and has competed in MMA for the UFC, Bellator, KSW, and more. He is also a former strongman champion.

Barnett’s coming off a loss to Gabe Kidd at Bloodsport XIII this April. He did not compete at August’s Bloodsport XIV in New Jersey.

The Bloodsport: London card, largely featuring talent from the UK, has four matches announced so far:

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport: London (Sunday, September 28) —

  • Josh Barnett vs. Oli Thompson
  • Heddi Karaoui vs. Kevin Lloyd
  • Ryan Davies vs. James Pharrell
  • Lou Nixon vs. Chris Bungard
  • Anthony Ogogo, Chris Ridgeway, Brett Semtex, and Mark Trew confirmed to compete
  • Roy Wood of Snake Pit Wigan will receive a lifetime achievement award

Josh Barnett reveals Goldberg was once planned for Bloodsport Bushido

Josh Barnett says last year’s Bloodsport Bushido was originally supposed to be headlined by him vs. Goldberg.

Barnett was a guest on The Ariel Helwani Show on Wednesday to promote this Saturday’s Bloodsport event in New Jersey. He spoke about being part of Goldberg’s walk-out entourage at Saturday Night’s Main Event recently and revealed that they had hoped to work with each other at Sumo Hall in June 2024.

Barnett said:

“The original main event was actually going to be me vs. Bill Goldberg. Me and Bill had come to an agreement about it and everything and we were trying to make it happen but at the end of the day it wasn’t something we could put together. But we’d agreed on pretty much all the necessary items but he’s a very, very important man with a lot of obligations and contracts and all sorts of stuff.”

When asked if he’s still interested in promoting him vs. Goldberg, Barnett replied, “Anytime Bill decides that’s something he wants to do then I’m there but he’s had an incredible career.”

Barnett was defeated by Jon Moxley in the main event of Bloodsport Bushido.

Natalya will return to Bloodsport this weekend after defeating Miyu Yamashita in her debut in April. She will wrestle Masha Slamovich on the show. Barnett responded that working with Natalya has been “easy as always” and commented on her motivation for being part of Bloodsport.

“I think the big thing about what Nattie’s doing right now is that she doesn’t have to do any of this. She’s made money hand over fist. She’s a very popular person. She’s accomplished a ton of things in the industry and she’s already cemented her name as somebody of legacy. But that desire to go out and wrestle is still very strong inside her.

Barnett was also asked for his opinion on the WWE Unreal docuseries on Netflix, and did not hold back in his response.

“I absolutely hate it. I think it has no place in the business,” Barnett responded.

“I am 100 percent Team Kayfabe. I view it like nobody wants to go to an illusionist show to be told how the trick goes. They just want to see the trick.”

The lineup for Saturday’s Bloodsport show is below:

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIV lineup | Saturday, August 2 | Rutherford, New Jersey

Barnett’s full appearance is available below:

Date & location revealed for next Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport

The 14th edition of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport from GCW now has a location and date attached.

Announced Wednesday on social media by Barnett himself, the next show will be held on Saturday, August 2nd at the Williams Center in Rutherford, New Jersey, as part of GCW Summersmash weekend — the same weekend WWE SummerSlam is taking place.

The event will stream live on Triller+.

As of now, Barnett will host three Bloodsports in 2025. The first was held as part of the GCW Collective during WrestleMania 41 weekend in the Las Vegas area with this New Jersey show as the second. The third will be held in September as the format debuts in London, England.

Last year, there were four-such events with one taking place in Tokyo, Japan, for the first time. It was the most per year since 2021’s four.

No names were announced as of now, but could include multiple WWE and WWE NXT talents as it has in recent times — most notably with Natalya debuting in April. Other organizations like AEW and TNA have been represented as well.

History of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport

The former UFC heavyweight champion took over on the homage to the classic Jean Claude Van Damme film in April 2019 after the first was named for Matt Riddle.

The unique format where matches can only end via knockout or submission on a ring mat with no ropes has featured an influx of talent from across the wrestling world.

Past competitors include Barnett, Natalya, Jon Moxley, Shayna Baszler, Josh Alexander, Eddie Kingston, Charlie Dempsey, Masha Slamovich, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, and more.

Bloodsport XIII live results: Josh Barnett vs. Gabe Kidd, Natalya debuts

The 13th edition of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport returns as part of WrestleMania week in Las Vegas, live from the Palms with a slew of WWE talent on the show.

Barnett himself will compete in the main event, taking on former NJPW Strong champion and Barnett disciple Gabe Kidd.

WWE’s Natalya will make her Bloodsport debut as she goes one-on-one with Miyu Yamashita. She will be flanked by roster mate and Bloodsport regular Shayna Baszler who takes on Konami.

The men’s WWE main roster will also be well-represented as Karrion Kross fights JR Kratos while Pete Dunne goes heads-up against Timothy Thatcher.

NXT will also have a presence with Tavion Heights vs. Royce Issacs; Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki; and Karmen Petrovic fighting Maika.

The card is rounded out by former IWGP World Champion Zack Sabre Jr. vs. former ROH World Champion Jonathan Gresham, and former AEW/ROH wrstler Leyla Hirsch against Jordan Blade.

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Bloodsport rules: Fights are won by KO, submission, countout, DQ, or referee stoppage. If a fight falls out of the ring, fighters must allow their opponent the chance to get back into the ring. There is a 10 count on the outside. No biting, no eye gouging, no hair pulling, no small joint manipulation, no low blows, no foreign objects, no fighting after the bell. Any violation can result in a disqualification.

The Las Vegas crowd was hot for all competitors during the introductory ceremony before the fights. Karrion Kross got on the mic and hyped the show, thanked Josh Barnett for bringing it back to Vegas, and then said they had the best in the world on this show.

Leyla Hirsch (0–0) vs. Jordan Blade (0–0)

The Las Vegas crowd was hot for all competitors during the introductory ceremony before the fights. Karrion Kross got on the mic and hyped the show, thanked Josh Barnett for bringing it back to Vegas, and then said they had the best in the world on this show.

Leyla Hirsch (0–1) def. Jordan Blade (0–0) via TKO in 3:34

Jimmy Smith and “Filthy” Tom Lawlor on commentary for this event tonight. Jordan Blade was super-stoked to be there, slamming her hands on the mat upon entrance into the ropeless ring. The venue and camera setup looked really cool for this show and might be the best looking of all the Bloodsport events so far.

Hirsch with a quick double-leg seconds into the fight. Blade took her back and slammed crossfaces across Hirsch head, then picked her up with a waist lock and German suplexed her before mounting her and laying down fists. Blade attempted an arm bar but then went to an omoplata but Hirsch rolled out of it, stood up, went for a straight ankle lock but Blade tried reversing it, swept her, and tried a footlock of her own. Smith referenced Bas Rutten vs. Frank Shamrock when they were trading slaps in while they fought for leglocks. That’s what it looked like.

Hirsch went for a fireman’s carry, but Blade blocked it and sprawled. Hirsch rolled out of it and went for a cross-arm breaker. She looked like she had it locked in, but Blade was able to stack her, lift her up, and then powerbomb her to the mat, breaking the hold. Blade then pounced and went into mounted ground-and-pound before attempting a cross-arm breaker of her own. Hirsch broke out of it and kicked Blade in the leg, then gave her a German suplex of her own. Blade was stunned.

They traded open palm strikes on their feet for a bit until Hirsch caught Blade with a power slam and followed up with ground and pound and the ref called for the TKO.

Maika (0–0) defeated Karmen Petrovic (1–0) via submission in 4:27

Petrovic debuted at Bloodsport last year and impressed with her karate background on display. She beat Sumie Sakai previously. “The Crimson Cannon Empress” Maika is one of STARDOM’s top stars.

Petrovic was quick with her low leg kicks early on. Maika took her down to the mat but neither could gain the upper hand and both ended up on their feet shortly after. The crowd was split cheering for both. Maika slammed Petrovic a few times with mat returns. Maika slapped Petrovic on the ground and broke away.

On their feet, Petrovic took Maika down with a spinning sweep and followed with a rear headlock. Maika was able to balloon-sweep her way out of Petrovic’s grips and later caught Petrovic with an armlock. Crowd got hot towards the end of this.

Petrovic with a flurry of kicks towards the end, but when she went for a spinning kick, Maika caught it, locked her ankle, then transitioned to a sleeper before taking her over, slamming her backwards, then finished Petrovic off with the rear naked choke. The fights continue to heat up.

Charlie Dempsey NXT (3–1) defeated Shinya Aoki DDT (0–0) via TKO

Dempsey has become somewhat of a Bloodsport regular in the past few years. He picked up a win over Tracy Williams and a loss to Royce Isaacs since he’s been appearing. Aoki, on the other hand, hasn’t appeared on any of the Bloodsport shows, but he’s perfect for the setting. At a time in the 2000s–2010s he was arguably the best grappler from Japan. He has plenty of MMA experience, recently picking up a win for ONE FC, but regularly wrestles atypical matches for DDT.

They began with a Greco-Roman knucklelock test-of-strength that showed off both wrestler’s power and flexibility. Dempsey was eventually able to suplex Aoki over, but Aoki slipped away and went for a double wristlock. He’d move to a kneebar attempt but couldn’t sink it in, nor the heel hook. They’d fight in a figure-four that Aoki’d lock in but Dempsey broke out of it, again with power. He’s the bigger of the two here.

Aoki attempted a full nelson but Dempsey broke out of it. Aoki has Dempsey back on the mat with a headscissors. The crowd started chanting for Dempsey. They fought for armlocks again.

Dempsey fought for a suplex but Aoki answered with a cobra twist. Dempsey used a sneaky toehold to escape. He went for a bridging calfslicer but Aoki caught Dempsey in a choke. Dempsey went back to the toehold and bent himself backwards with it. Aoki scored a toehold of his own. Quite literally hold-for-hold in these moments, nonstop.

Dempsey went for a butterfly suplex but he couldn’t bring Aoki over. Aoki again went to a sleeper but Dempsey reversed it with a Regal Plex, TKO’ing Aoki. This was technical grappling heaven. Really good stuff.

Karrion Kross WWE (1–1) defeated JR Kratos (1–1) in 7:41 via submission

Both Kratos and Kross return to Bloodsport after a while away. Kross had one of the best Bloodsport matches ever against Davey Boy Smith Jr. on the first of Barnett’s Bloodsports. This is another Bloodsport “dream match,” one where you think to yourself “huh, why hasn’t this one happened yet?”

Kross fought in his jiu-jitsu gi; Kratos in just his gi pants. Kross had a big hometown advantage in Las Vegas and sounded to have a lot of fans in the house. He bowed to each side before the bout.

They were cautious at the beginning of this. Kratos was on top early in this and the crowd booed a bit even then. They cheered when Kross reversed and got on top. Kratos came back with control from the side as Kross was in turtle position; Kratos threw a few knees.

Kross tried a choke from behind but couldn’t cinch it in. This was a slower power match with two big, big dudes. Kross attempted an armbar but no dice. Kratos got on top, pulled Kross’ gi top over his head and threw a couple knees to the grounded Kross—which is legal in Bloodsport. Kross didn’t look too happy and whipped off his gi and the crowd hyped up for it. They chanted “you f’d up” at Kratos.

They traded strikes on their feet from here. They talked trash. Kratos dropped Kross with one shot but Kross was up quickly afterwards. At the five-minute call they were trading chest chops. Kratos said something about WWE and insisted Kross lay in harder chops, which Kross did. Kratos then leveled Kross with a lariat, then folded him with a German suplex. “F*ck you, Kratos!” was Kross’ response to that. Kratos answered with a power bomb. Kross flipped him off. Kratos grabbed his middle finger. Kross shoved him off and drilled Kratos with a backdrop suplex. This looked awesome. The crowd chanted “one more time!” and he obliged them.

Kratos somehow came back with a jumping knee, but Kross was able to grab an arm triangle from the back position and get Kross to tap with it. This was really fun, really violent and everything you’d want out of a “hoss fight” like this.

Next on the card was a tribute ceremony to Combat Icons Tank Abott and Don Frye, who appeared on stage between bouts.

Pete Dunne (0–0) defeated Timothy Thatcher (2–3) via submission in 11:15

Thatcher is another Bloodsport stalwart and holds a big and special win over Josh Barnett in the past. This will be Dunne’s Bloodsport debut and I think a number of fans are eagerly awaiting for Dunne to be “let off the leash,” so to speak.

The two locked up early and traded positions. They targeted each other’s shoulders. Thatcher went for an armlock but Dunne countered out and then went after Thatcher’s legs and ankles. Thatcher offered a standing straight anklelock as an answer before moving into a single-leg crab, and from there to a bow-and-arrow submission.

Thatcher and Dunne began trading fists on the ground after a while. Thatcher would return to the single-leg crab and really wrenched on it. Dunne threw some upkicks but Thatcher dropped to his back and went for an achilles lock. The two booted each other in the face on the ground. Thatcher rolled into a hammerlock using his legs, then went after Dunne’s joints, his fingers and knuckles, before transitioning to a head-and-arm shoulder lock. Dunne slipped out of that but Thatcher would then go for an STF but couldn’t finish it. Dunne with an armlock attempt but Thatcher was able to escape into Dunne’s closed guard. Dunne threw closed fists at Thatcher and then was able to catch Thatcher with a triangle choke. Thatcher moved out of that back into the single-leg crab. Dunne had a nice escape, then he tried snapping Thatcher’s fingers while he held him in a scarf hold.

Dunne went for an STF of his own and had a bit more luck than Thatcher did, kind of. Neither of these guys could cinch anything in for more than a few seconds. Dunne finally locked in a heel hook, a deep one, but Thatcher tried slapping his way out, then stomping his way out, which worked. The 10-minute call sounded. Thatcher slapped Dunne in the face on the ground and move into a cross ambreaker. Dunne escape and started stomping Thatcher’s head. Thatcher fired back with huge uppercuts. Dunne with a gamengiri kick to Thatcher’s head before snapping Thatcher’s fingers and tapping him out with an armbar. The crowd chanted “Brusierweight!” afterwards.

Nattie Neidhart WWE (0–0) defeated Miyu Yamashita TJPW (0–1) via submission

Neidhart has been vocal on social media about her passion for this match. It will be the first time in 18 years she’ll have stepped inside a non-WWE ring. Yamashita’s Bloodsport debut was a violent spectacle of a main event against WWE’s Shayna Baszler.

Crowd was excited for Nattie during this. They were tentative early, with Yamashita throwing kicks and Neidhart trying to grapple Yamashita to the mat. Yamashita threw knees but Neidhart caught her with a double-leg. She’d pass Yamashita’s guard, but Yamashita went for a guillotine choke.

Yamashita went for a straight ankle lock on the ground. She slapped Neidhart will they were on the ground, with Yamashita attacking the legs. The crowd sounded split between the two wrestlers at this point. Yamashita came down on Neidhart with a heavy spinning kick to Neidhart while she was on the ground.

Neidhart fought out of Yamashita’s back control and found Yamashita in an ankle lock, then later a rear chinlock. She almost caught Yamashita in a leglock.

The two traded hard strikes on their feet. They jaw-jacked and slapped the snot out of each other. Neidhart grounded Yamashita and locked in an Americana lock. Yamashita moved back to the guillotine lock before Neidhart slammed Yamashita to the mat to break the hold.

Neidhart went for the sharpshooter but no luck. Yamashita caught Neidhart with a massive wheelkick to the face that looked like it KO’d Neidhart but it didn’t. Neidhart shoved Yamashita into the ring post, then rolled her over and slapped on the sharpshooter. Yamashita was passed out, so the ref called the match. The crowd went wild for Neidhart. A “both these women” chant broke out.

Neidhart offered a handshake afterwards, but Yamashita shook her head “no” and then flipped her the double bird. This set Neidhart off, and the two started fighting again. Neidhart flipped her own double bird before high-fiving fans walking to the back. She’d run into Kenzie Page from NWA who then flipped her own double bird, which sparked another mini-brawl in the crowd. Security broke that one up.

Tavion Heights (0–0) defeated Royce Isaacs (1–2) via TKO in 8:38

Isaacs, longtime Bloodsport competitor, secured a victory over NXT’s Charlie Dempsey at Bloodsport XI on July 28, 2024. Tavion Heights was a Greco-Roman bronze medalist in the 2020 Olympics and competed in NOAH’s N1 Victory tournament in 2024.

Heights with a big suplex early on. Isaacs rolled into a leglock or kneebar after this. Heights used an anaconda roll on Isaacs but couldn’t keep him down. Isaacs with a double wristlock from guard position as Heights tried rolling out of it. He eventually did and locked in a scarf hold. Isaacs picked Heights up by the leg before headbutting him to the mat and going for an armbar. Filthy Tom made a good point mentioning that many competitors had gone for armbars all night but no one had been able to finish with one, at least not yet.

When the five-minute call sounded, the two traded fisticuffs before a big German suplex from Isaacs, who’d then move back into an armlock submission, then to a leglock. Heights escaped and leveled Isaacs with a lariat. He then took Isaacs over with a deadlift capture suplex that could have turned out to be a disaster but they pulled it off in the end. Heights moved into an arm triangle but Isaacs escaped. He’d answer with a big sit-out power bomb on Heights, then mounted him and dropped elbows before transitioning to an armbar, then to a toehold. Heights was figuratively on the ropes.

Isaacs locked in a guillotine choke but the two ended up spilling out of the ring onto the floor. Heights suplexed Isaacs back into the ring, the hit his super high-angle belly-to-belly before TKO’ing Isaacs with headbutts on the mat. Really good bout with a different flavor from the others tonight.

Shayna Baszler (2–0) defeated Konami (1–0) via TKO in 5:58

Konami has appeared on Bloodsport: Bushido in Japan last year. Baszler is back for her third Bloodsport after two matches against Miyu Yamashita and Masha Slamovich, respectively. 

Michin from WWE was in Baszler’s corner. She went for a takedown early on. Both were aggressive from the get-go. They traded footlocks on the mat until they rolled out onto the floor. Well, Konami more so. She took advantage of the ring post and cranked on a leglock.

Konami took Baszler out with two heavy kicks of her own, one of the running, sliding kind. Baslzer collected herself on the floor before getting back into the ring.

The two traded high and low kicks in the center of the ring before Baszler caught Konami with a huge cradle suplex. Konami was back a few moments later with a takedown that smoothly transitioned her into an armbar.

Konami had both hooks in as she locked Baszler in a rear naked choke, stuck to her back like a spider, before Baszler escaped by locking Konami’s foot and twisting it into an ankle lock, thus forcing Konami to break the choke. She then held Konami in a standing ankle lock, but Konami rolled out of it and then kicked Baszler in the back, which forced Baszler face-first into the ringpost. Konami followed with a German suplex. Baszler answered with a modified Fisherman’s buster and followed with a flurry of stomps to the back of Konami’s head. The ref called for the bell. Baszler wins via TKO.

Zack Sabre Jr. NJPW (0–0) defeated Jonathan Gresham (0–1) in 2:34 of Overtime via TKO

Gresham returns to Bloodsport after a long time away. Gresham’s memorable match was against hardcore wrestler Masashi Takeda. Sabre is making his debut. I think this is a total dream match for a lot of people, especially for those who love World of Sport-style wrestling.

The speed of which they were exchanging holds was smooth, quick, fluid. At one point Sabre kicked Gresham so hard across the ring that Gresham flew out onto the floor.

They traded holds at a mile a minute, stretching and bending and rolling and folding. They’d move from the head and neck to the legs and feet and back up again at a fast pace. Sabre again kicked Gresham away in the ass and sent him out onto the floor. Gresham would later get his revenge and boot Sabre to the floor while he was on the edge of the apron.

This match is great in that it completely fits at a Bloodsport event, but on the other hand it feels very different, fresh, and the pace and flow they were moving at, the story that was told, it really worked.

Sabre and Gresham stood toe-to-toe. Sabre emphasized their height differential. This caught boos from the crowd. He put his chin on top of Gresham’s head. He slapped at Gresham, which Gresham kept brushing away. Gresham caught Sabre with a big chop that awed the crowd. He’d then take Sabre over with two suplexes before methodically moving into a wild pretzel lock that involves so many different limbs that I just don’t know what to call it. He was twisting Sabre’s ass up. He’d eventually fall into a single-leg crab while he peppered Sabre with hammerfists to the head.

On their feet, Gresham chopped Sabre, but Sabre answered with a huge palm strike. Blasted him. Gresham eventually came back with one of his own. They traded hard uppercuts, chops. Sabre threw kicks. Gresham furiously grappled Sabre back to the mat. The pace in this was wild.

Gresham locked in a figure four with two minutes left in the match. Sabre tried reversing the hold but Gresham rolled him back. With one minute left, they both rolled out onto the floor while tangled up in the figure four hold. They scrambled back into the ring with thirty seconds to go. They traded hard strikes, hard ones; Gresham took Sabre down and tried hammerfisting his way to victory but the time limit expired. A draw.

We find out that we are going into a five-minute overtime period.

Gresham and Sabre pick up right where they left off, trading really hard strikes, chops, kicks, the works. Sabre eventually went down after a chop. The two looked exhausted. Sabre was back up and they again traded kicks for chops. Sabre caught Gresham with some hard slaps behind the ear.

The finish saw Sabre block Gresham with a hard fist to Gresham’s arm, then a hard Penalty Kick to the face for the TKO.

It’d be fair to put this on your top matches of the year lists. It was really good. Very high level pro wrestling.

Gabe Kidd NJPW (0–0) defeated Josh Barnett (10–2–1) via TKO

Kidd made his Bloodsport debut here. He lost the NJPW Strong title to Tomohiro Ishii recently at Windy City Riot.

Barnett threw a fast hands early on. Kidd went for a single-leg. Kidd yelled at people in the crowd. Fans chanted “STFU” at Kidd. He’d sweep Barnett, but Barnett would reverse it and throw palm strikes. Kidd is nearly Barnett’s size and his body matches well.

Kidd would abruptly step out of the ring to shout at a fan in the crowd, more towards the second level.

When he was back in the ring, he’d bully Barnett out of it, shoving him to the floor before flying onto him, then locking in a front facelock. Barnett would toss Kidd onto the apron and rain down elbows.

Barnett hunted for a double wrist lock. Lawlor and Smith argued on commentary about whether it’s called a double wrist lock or a Kimura. Barnett locked Kidd in a butterfly neck crank that Kidd fought out of.

Barnett would sweep Kidd into a straight ankle lock with a smooth technique, almost like a schoolboy rollup into the submission.

Barnett held a headlock on Kidd for a bit, up until Kidd stood up and drilled him down with a backdrop suplex. They’d trade hard shots on their feet and Barnett landed some hard knees. Kidd launched Barnett with an exploder suplex, and would finish Barnett off with knees of his own and a brutal piledriver for the TKO victory. Excellent main event finish.

After the match, Kidd grabbed the mic and yelled at the same kid he was yelling at during the match and said he’d kick his arse. He then mentioned how there were lots of different promotions on the show but the guy from New Japan won the main event. He then asked for anyone to name him someone other than Barnett who’s done more to defend pro wrestling more than him. He said Barnett’s a champion in his heart and that he owed his life to Barnett. He offered a life’s worth of respect to Barnett for everything he’d done for Kidd. It was a solid speech.

Barnett got on the mic and put Kidd over and how much stronger, wiser and better Kidd had become after he’d gone through his darker days. Barnett thanked the fans and wrestlers for everything.

Final Thoughts: Maybe I’m just high on it from the last two matches, but I truly think this was the strongest Bloodsport of them all. Production-wise, it was the best next to Bloodsport Bushido. The crowd was extremely it, every match. The bouts themselves had a good variety and the competitors all looked stoked to be a part of the show. Every match was excellent but Sabre vs. Gresham was something else, and the main event was a great heavyweight match with good drama. Again, everything on this is very much worth watching. Go out of your way to watch. And I hope they continue to film at similar venues with similar production value. Bloodsport continues to come into its own. Well done to all involved.

Josh Barnett gives updates for Bloodsport XIII card & broadcast team

The card for next Thursday’s Bloodsport XIII has undergone both a few changes and a lively addition according to competitor and booker Josh Barnett.

Barnett took to social media Thursday to announce a few developments which may have been tied to Wednesday’s news that one competitor — Lou Nixon — was pulled from the show and then compensated which was chalked up to some miscommunication.

Barnett’s announcements:

  • David Modzmanashvilli will not be on the show as he withdrew from the event. That resulted in what Barnett called a “gap” which led to talent being moved around.
  • One of those talents was Simon Gotch who was moved to Joey Janela’s Spring Break, night two.
  • Former MMA fighter and former MLW Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (seen above) will join Jimmy Smith in calling the show.

“These things took place a while back and with the event coming next week, (I) wanted to let the public know,” Barnett said on X.

Bloodsport XIII final card | Thursday, April 17 | The Palms in Las Vegas, Nevada | Triller+

  • Tavion Heights vs. Royce Issacs
  • Josh Barnett vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jonathan Gresham
  • Karrion Kross vs. JR Kratos
  • Shayna Baszler vs. Konami
  • Natalya vs. Miyu Yamashita
  • Pete Dunne vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Leyla Hirsch vs. Jordan Blade
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki
  • Karmen Petrovic vs. Maika

Lou Nixon still being paid for pulled Bloodsport XIII booking

Indie wrestler Lou Nixon shared a positive update last night after being pulled from his scheduled booking at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII.

Calling it the “worst news imaginable,” Nixon posted a statement Wednesday afternoon announcing that he’s lost his spot on the Las Vegas Bloodsport event due to too many matches being booked. Nixon said he understands it’s business, but he felt like his heart has been ripped out and did not know what would be next for him in pro wrestling.

He then gave an update last night saying that, while he’s still disappointed he won’t be wrestling at Bloodsport, Josh Barnett and Game Changer Wrestling have handled the miscommunication professionally. Nixon is still being paid for the booking and will be back for another Bloodsport show in the near future.

“First of all thanks for the support and kind messages, really felt the love today, don’t worry I’m not going anywhere,” Nixon wrote. “Josh contacted me as soon as he was made aware of the situation, unfortunately there was miscommunication with the booking which has led to this error. Even though I’m still gutted I won’t be on this show, I’d like to thank Josh & GCW for handling this situation like true professionals, reaching out to clear things up and still paying me for the booking.

“And after the conversation we had, I can assure you all I’ll be back on Bloodsport in the near future.”

Barnett said he was not aware of the situation but reached out once he found out.

“Lou is a homie of ours and as soon as I was made aware, I went to him directly, handled it, and made sure our guy was good,” Barnett tweeted. “One show is one show, but we have plans with Lou and I always have him on the shortlist.”

Nixon is from the United Kingdom and goes by “Big” Lou Nixon. He wrestled for Bloodsport twice in 2024, losing against Erik Hammer and defeating Calvin Tankman. Nixon will be one of the entrants in the Clusterf*ck match that GCW and Joey Janela are presenting in Vegas on Saturday, April 19.

Bloodsport XIII is taking place next Thursday (April 17) and will air live on TrillerTV+. The updated card for the show can be seen here.

Josh Barnett vs. Gabe Kidd slated for Bloodsport XIII

The namesake of Bloodsport finally has his opponent set for next week’s event from Las Vegas, Nevada.

Announced on Wednesday, Josh Barnett will take on NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Gabe Kidd in what is expected to be the headliner of the 13th edition of the event.

Barnett is riding into the show on a five-fight win streak under Bloodsport rules, last defeating Tom Pestock (the former Baron Corbin) at January’s The People vs. GCW. For Kidd, it will be his Bloodsport debut and first time competing against Barnett.

Barnett posted on X, “A relationship that spans years. One that saw a master impart his knowledge to a young and hungry wolf. A pup now grown into a ravenous, mad dog. Will the teacher have to put a bullet into this rabid predator or will the student bite that hand that feeds completely off?”

This year’s show will feature even more WWE and NXT talent including the debuting Natalya and the returning Shayna Baszler among others.

Here’s the final card for next Thursday from The Palms in Las Vegas, Nevada:

  • Josh Barnett vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jonathan Gresham
  • Karrion Kross vs. JR Kratos
  • Shayna Baszler vs. Konami
  • Natalya vs. Miyu Yamashita
  • Pete Dunne vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Leyla Hirsch vs. Jordan Blade
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki
  • Karmen Petrovic vs. Maika
  • Tavion Heights vs. Royce Issacs

Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jonathan Gresham set for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII

The sixth match is official for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII, and it features a former IWGP World Heavyweight Champion against a former ROH World Champion.

Barnett announced in a social media post Wednesday that former IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Zack Sabre Jr. will take on former ROH World Champion Jonathan Gresham at Bloodsport XIII set for Thursday, April 17. The show will take place in Las Vegas as part of WrestleMania week festivities.

Sabre vs. Gresham is a matchup of two of the great technical wrestlers of their generation and fits with the shoot-fighting tone of the co-promoted Barnett and GCW Bloodsport series.

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII will stream live on Triller TV+ at 11 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Pacific from the Pearl at the Palms Arena in Las Vegas. The card so far:

  • Pete Dunne vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Leyla Hirsch vs. Jordan Blade
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki
  • Karmen Petrovic vs. Maika
  • Karrion Kross vs. JR Kratos
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jonathan Gresham

Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki booked for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII

A new match is now set for Bloodsport XIII.

Josh Barnett announced on Saturday that NXT’s Charlie Dempsey will take on MMA veteran Shinya Aoki during WrestleMania weekend on April 17.

“Catch Wrestling vs Kosen Judo and Jiu Jitsu. Pro Wrestling vs MMA. The young acolyte vs the old veteran. Blood will be spilled. Ligaments torn. Breathes halted. And they’d have it no other way. Charlie Dempsey vs Shinya Aoki at Josh Barnett’s: Bloodsport XIII,” he wrote.

Aoki, who has a 49-11 record in MMA, first started wrestling in 2013. He joined DDT in 2018 where he frequently appears on tour, winning their Extreme Championship at one point. He also fights for ONE, defeating Eduard Folayang by submission on March 23.

Dempsey most recently was Heritage Cup champion in NXT, but lost the title to Lexis King earlier this year.

Here is the card so far for Bloodsport XIII:

  • Pete Dunne vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Natalya vs. Miyu Yamashita
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki