NWA Power results: Melina vs. Kylie Rae

NWA Power opened with Joe Galli breaking some news. He announced the Champion’s Series, a points-based tournament starting on July 13th. More news on how the tournament is going to work will be forthcoming.

Jennacide (with Taryn Terrell) defeated Lady Frost

This wasn’t bad. Lady Frost looked quite good, and it’s clear that they’re trying to make Jennacide a star. She is still quite green, but there is a lot of potential there, and she has a great look too.

Frost was given quite a bit in this little match, but she stood out and looked great. Jennacide was able to turn the match around when Terrell distracted the referee and Jennacide knocked Frost off the top rope.

Jennacide worked over Frost with armlocks, keeping her grounded. Every time Frost went to escape, Frost was able to go back to the arm. Frost hit a big spinning kick, but Jennacide caught her on the ropes and hit a tombstone (Jenna 9000) for the pinfall.

–Sal Rinauro won a TV title #1 contender match against PJ Hawx and Colby Corino, which happened on something called NWA High Voltage. I had no idea this existed until they mentioned it here, and they showed highlights. I managed to find the match on YouTube. I figured this was going to be on Power when they built it a few weeks ago.

Rinauro cut a great promo about how all he needed was 3 seconds to become the TV Champion, and that while Pope was a great champion, he was coming for it. Colby Corino attacked him from behind and went to give him a brainbuster on the apron, but Rinauro’s feet hit the ropes on the way down, which caused both of them to crash to the floor, and both men hit really hard. That was brutal, I hope they’re okay.

–Austin Idol and Tyrus came out. Idol buried Rinauro and Corino, saying Tyrus is the real star. Pope came out, and since his match was canceled with Rinauro, he decided he was going to fight him right now, putting the title on the line. Idol kept Tyrus back and said it would be on their time.

Aron Stevens stepped in with a match that was unannounced for the crowd due to Rinauro’s injury.

Aron Stevens, Mims, & Captain YUMA vs.  Kratos, PJ Hawx, & Luke Hawx went to a no contest

Well, this was interesting from a story perspective with Kratos and Stevens actually smiling and getting along with each other. Honestly, I hope they don’t break up as a team. I really like the dynamic of Stevens being a nice guy and Kratos being a miserable monster, but somehow make the team work. I hope that continues. I think La Rebelion vs. Stevens & Kratos will be great.

Joe Galli said that Kratos and Stevens came up with this match when the injury happened as a make-good. Kratos and Stevens fist-bumped, but Kratos didn’t fist bump the others. Stevens and Kratos went to a neutral corner, discussing the match and smiling. I sense trouble brewing, as Kratos is way too happy.

Mims and Luke Hawx started the match, and Mims used hit size and power to keep the veteran down. Mims tagged Stevens in, even though he was at the wrong turnbuckle because he was holding the tag rope. Stevens did a few spots with Hawx before PJ Hawx and YUMA were in.

YUMA wanted Kratos, and he tagged in, but he looked like he would rather stay in the corner chatting with Stevens. YUMA must have a death wish, as Kratos no-sold a shoulder tackle. Kratos murdered YUMA with a forearm, and the massacre began, as he threw YUMA across the ring with a suplex.

La Rebelion came out and mocked the match in the ring saying that the teams involved were making a mockery of the titles and the sport. Kratos did not look pleased. La Rebelion attacked YUMA, and the ref threw the match out. La Rebellion then attacked Kratos. All 6 men were not pleased and chased them off.

–Jax Dane and Crimson were with May Valentine. Dane talked about how he thought Crimson went too far in his match with Slice Boogie last week, and they promised to address the issue live in front of fans at Power soon.

–JTG and Chris Adonis joined Kyle Davis at the podium to discuss their upcoming NWA National Championship match. JTG reminded everyone that he was there for gold, and that anyone in his way is in a very unlucky position.

Adonis said he was ready for war, and that the NWA National title is a title that he never lost, so he is going to do what it takes to win it back, and his insurance policy of Strictly Business was there to help him. Fred Rosser came out and said he was going to back JTG up.

–The Mystery Man was with May Valentine and continued to say his identity did not need to be known right now. He talked about how he dedicated his life to wrestling, and he is here because he believes he is the best technical wrestler in the world, and he wanted to become a champion, and his identity didn’t matter.

–Thunder Rosa told May Valentine that she was going to stay out of Melina’s match with Kylie Rae tonight.

Kylie Rae defeated Melina

Melina got booed by the audience despite being a babyface in recent weeks. Rae was cheered quite a bit, and Melina worked this match as a heel, so that feels like a phantom heel turn. I hate that. This was a good match by Melina standards, so it was fine. Rae looked fantastic in the match, she’s an exceptional worker.

Melina tried to ground Rae, but Rae was able to counter every move. Rae offered a handshake, but Melina hit some hard forearms and started striking Rae hard, including poking the eyes. Melina hit a DDT for a near fall, but Rae kicked out. Rae spun out of an inverted DDT position and hit a superkick on Melina for the pinfall. The show went off the air as Rae celebrated, winning clean as a sheet.

Three matches announced for NJPW Strong

The full card for this Friday’s New Japan Strong has been announced.

This week’s show is being billed as a Road to New Japan Cup USA event. The main event will have Brody King, Logan Riegel, and Sterling Riegel team up to take on Team Filthy, consisting of Tom Lawlor, Chris Dickinson, and JR Kratos. It was noted in NJPW’s preview of this week’s show that there may be a conflict of interest between Dickinson and Brody King, as the two appeared at the end of Friday’s Ring of Honor 19th anniversary event, seemingly forming a stable with themselves, Homicide and Tony Deppen.

Another match set for Friday is TJP and Alex Couglin vs. Misterioso and Jordan Clearwater. A third match, the opening bout, will have Rocky Romero face NJPW young lion Kevin Knight. 

The NJPW Cup USA tournament will start on next week’s show. Opening round matches have Clark Connors facing Lio Rush, Brody King taking on Chris Dickinson, Ren Narita facing Tom Lawlor, and Hikuleo facing Fred Rosser.

NJPW Strong results: Fred Rosser vs. JR Kratos

The show opened with Rosser addressing his opponent for tonight, JR Kratos. He explained that this match was not about him, but about Rosser.

Kratos said that “the best, top-tier, no bullsh*t” wrestlers are in NJPW. He said he respects Rosser’s wrestling and what he stands for, but since Rosser called him out, now Kratos has a reason to disrespect him. Rosser said you can’t manufacture passion and that he wants the New Japan Cup USA 2021 more than anything else. Kratos said he’d show Rosser and the New Japan world that there is a “legit no-bullsh*t wrestler” in their midst. 

Strong promos from both at the top of the show.

The Rigel Twins (Logan & Sterling Riegel) defeated Adrian Quest and Barrett Brown

Before the match, the announcers brought up Brown’s recent losing streak and general depression with his current standing in NJPW USA right now. They showed a video from a few weeks back when he, the DKC and Rey Horus lost their match, with Brown losing his cool while explaining his recent drought.

The Riegel Twins came out wearing compression gear with tattoo designs and ski masks, like Brody King. The two come off more confident than they have in the past, and showcased that throughout the match with their unique double-team offense in the ring.

Though Quest was in first for his team, Barrett Brown was on the receiving end of much of the Twins’ attack. For much of the first half, both Riegels wore Brown out on their side of the ring. Brown put one of the brothers down with a half-and-half suplex out of nowhere before tagging out to Quest, who cleared the ring, putting Logan Riegel down with a backdrop suplex for two. Brown landed a single-leg basement dropkick to Riegel.

At around the ten-minute mark, the Riegel brothers were back in control and used a double fall-away slam on Quest—something I don’t think I’d ever seen before—before Brown took out both Riegels, using a Japanese arm drag into the turnbuckle on Logan, then a snap suplex on Sterling into the corner on top of his prone twin.

The brothers both slipped under the ropes to the floor to avoid more power attacks from Brown, who squared up and hit the ropes as though he was about to do a suicide dive onto both Riegels. Adrian Quest sprung out of the corner off the top rope, however, landing on both with a plancha of his own, effectively halting Brown.

Brown began yelling at Quest in the ring. After Brown finished, he turned around and suddenly found himself inside a Logan Riegel small package cradle for the three-count. 

As the twins celebrated, the beleaguered Brown began yelling at the referee. I imagine a new look and image for Brown is coming soon. Solid opener with a nice story that helped push Brown’s story forward.

Hikuleo defeated Jordan Clearwater to qualify for New Japan Cup USA 2021

Earlier in the show, the NJPW announcers set this up as if Clearwater were to win, it’d be a big upset. “The Golden Boy” Clearwater has been slightly repackaged for the show, with updated tights, ring jacket, and even a new hairdo that Kevin Kelly referred to as Jackie Fulton-esque.

Hikuleo took this one to the floor almost immediately, dishing out pain right from the bell. Clearwater dodged out of the way when Hikuleo charged at him against the ring post.

When they stood nose to nose back in the ring, we could see that even though Clearwater is actually quite tall, he still stood a few inches under Hikuleo. These two actually complemented each other well tonight, and a rivalry between them felt almost imminent. Since Clearwater is one of the bigger fellows on the roster, it was interesting to see a monster like Hikuleo dominate him in the ring, and it was great to see the underdog side of Clearwater, something we haven’t had a proper chance to watch yet.

Towards the end of the match, Hikuleo challenged Clearwater to chop him. Clearwater laid in a good four or five solid chops, but Hikuleo absorbed them, then put Clearwater on the mat twice with two front-handed chops.

Clearwater came back with a Hail Mary running neckbreaker on Hikuleo for two. He threw a lariat at the monster, who dropped to a knee but wouldn’t go down. When Clearwater went for a running big boot, Hikuleo dodged it, then planted Clearwater with his sit-out Death Valley Bomb for the win.

Fred Rosser defeated JR Kratos to qualify for New Japan Cup USA 2021

I didn’t expect this to be one of the best matches in the short history of NJPW Strong, but we have to give credit where it’s due. This was a damn fine professional wrestling match!

Like Kevin Kelly mentioned at one point in the commentary, this really did feel like a title match that you could place on any modern wrestling show and it’d work, and even more so with a live audience.

Once the bell sounded, Rosser immediately rolled to the floor. Total Jay White move, but from a white-meat babyface. Kratos was aggressive, but he couldn’t lay his hands on Rosser, who’d slip in and out of the ring to maintain this psychological advantage. Kratos was shut down once he chased Rosser to the floor, eventually laying him out with a rough shoulder block that sent Rosser hard against the floor.

Back in the ring, Kratos launched Rosser across the ring with a vertical suplex. Leave it to Kratos to freshen up something as fundamental as a suplex. At around five minutes in, Kratos hip tossed Rosser three-quarters across the ring. Later, from a seated position, Kratos used a deadlift vertical suplex to Rosser, who is definitely not a junior heavyweight. Jeez.

Rosser threw haymakers at Kratos, then charged at him, tackling him through the ropes to the floor. He then dove off the apron twice, splatting onto Kratos with two Earthquake splashes, which Kratos sold as though someone had dropped an anvil on his chest.

When Rosser went high-risk and climbed to the top rope, Kratos knocked him off with a high enzuigiri kick that’d make Antonio Inoki proud, then suplexed Rosser back into the ring. Rosser later snuck out of Kratos’ grip while they were in the blue corner, and Rosser got Kratos into a fireman’s carry on his shoulders and landed what looked to be a picture-perfect gutbuster, but just for two.

The final moments saw Rosser attempt planting Kratos onto the apron with a backdrop suplex, but Kratos fought it off with a jumping knee strike. I think Kratos’ “special” meter must have been flashing at this point. Kratos looked to be going in for the kill when, suddenly, Rosser rolled him into a small package for three. Rosser digs in and gets the W here in just about 14 minutes.

Rosser didn’t have much time to celebrate afterwards, though: Hikuleo appeared at the entrance to “congratulate” Rosser with a beating. He threw Rosser back into the ring for Kratos, who laid Rosser out with a rolling lariat before heading to the back. Hikuleo then jumped into the ring and put Rosser down with a chokeslam and called him out, saying he wants Rosser next in the New Japan USA Cup.

Final thoughts:

Tonight’s episode of NJPW Strong was arguably its best in terms of storytelling and character development. The opening tag was no less in quality than matches prior, but the special focus on Barrett Brown’s story made me more interested in what they have in store for him down the road. He’s a great wrestler, but because this show hasn’t been on for more than a year yet, there just hasn’t been time or place until now.

 Hikuleo vs. Jordan Clearwater was much better than it probably had any right to be, and that’s no knock against the wrestlers themselves, as it was nice to see more sides to Clearwater in the ring; he could end up a new version of Barry Windham. Hikuleo continues to solidify himself as “house monster heel” on Strong and a legitimate threat to an undercard title IWGP US Heavyweight championship.

The main event, however, stole the show. Ironically, this was one of the best pure “American style” wrestling matches I have seen in a very long time, truly. For someone who either watches each week or for someone who doesn’t watch wrestling, I think either viewer would enjoy this a lot. The story and sub-stories within the match were clear, nothing felt convoluted or out of step with the match, it built on the quick promos both cut at the top of the show, and both wrestlers came off feeling more important than before the show. I’d to see a rematch in front of a live audience, which would have no doubt enhanced this bout’s intensity.

Next week sees Brody King take on Bateman and Ren Narita against Misterioso. Both matches are qualifiers for the New Japan Cup USA 2021 tournament.

New NWA Tag Team Champions crowned on UWN Primetime Live

New NWA Tag Team Champions were crowned on this week’s edition of UWN Primetime Live.

Aron Stevens & JR Kratos defeated James Storm & Eli Drake on Primetime Live last night to win the NWA Tag Team titles. The match was originally announced as Storm & Drake vs. Stevens & The Question Mark, but Stevens came out for the match alone. Kratos attacked Storm & Drake, then Stevens said no one could prove Kratos isn’t The Question Mark.

Stevens & Kratos got the win after Kratos low blowed Storm.

Prior to losing the titles last night, Storm & Drake had been NWA Tag Team Champions since defeating The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson) and The Wild Cards (Thomas Latimer & Royce Isaacs) in a triple threat match at the NWA’s Hard Times pay-per-view this January.

This is the fourth NWA title change to take place on Primetime Live since the weekly PPV series debuted this September. Trevor Murdoch defeated Stevens for the NWA National Championship in September. Last month, The Pope (Elijah Burke) defeated Zicky Dice for the NWA Television title and Serena Deeb defeated Thunder Rosa for the NWA Women’s Championship.

NJPW Strong results: Romero & Cobb vs. Kratos & Taylor

Fred Rosser defeated Jordan Clearwater

First up was “Mr. No Days Off” Fred Rosser—formerly Darren Young of WWE—taking on Karl Anderson trainee Jordan Clearwater. These two complemented each other well, two solid heavyweights with a slight size disparity and similar styles in the ring; good old fashioned American heavyweight wrestling. Not much flash or martial arts influence.

Both impressed here. Clearwater landed a big neckbreaker to the floor on Rosser, but “Mr. No Days Off” later put the rookie away after a basement dropkick into Clearwater’s face, putting him down for the count. 

Rosser cut a good promo afterwards, explaining that even though he can’t say much in Japanese, he’ll be able to say a lot more in the ring. Good opener.

Chase Owens defeated Danny Limelight

Limelight landed a diving frankensteiner, then a slingshot flatliner, shocking Owens and forcing him down to the floor to gather himself. Limelight kept up the pace and launched himself like a character in Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater over the top rope to the floor with a corkscrew Fosbury flop.

Owens recovered quickly and went on offense from here. There was a spot they did where Owens yanked Limelight through the ropes to the floor and they landed at the same time. It looked really cool, or much cooler than my explanation.

Limelight came back at one point with a wild tight-rope walk to springboard flying double knees. Holy smokes. He used a lot of springboard action in this, taking Owens out with aerial offense and an array of kicks. In the end, Owens blocked a springboard attack from Limelight, then spiked him with the cradle piledriver for the win. Short, action-packed second match.

Owens cut a promo backstage afterwards and declared that since he’s now back in the W column, the rest of NJPW is on notice, and he specifically mentioned both Shingo Takagi and Tetsuya Naito before throwing up a “too sweet” gesture and exiting.

JR Kratos and Rust Taylor defeated Rocky Romero and Jeff Cobb 

Romero and the returning Rust Taylor faced off first. They went at it for about five minutes on the mat. Taylor looked excellent. After a few minutes, Romero tagged out to Cobb. Rocky teased body slamming his partner onto Taylor, but while he struggled, Taylor rolled away and tagged out to the debuting JR Kratos.

For those who haven’t seen him before, Kratos is a wrestler from Sacramento, who has wrestled for a variety of promotions up and down the West Coast, as well as taking part in the first two of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport events.

Cobb and Kratos had a staredown that fans would have eaten up if there were any in attendance. Kratos actually made Cobb look kind of small in comparison. Kratos got the better of their initial exchanges, which led to him and Taylor working over Cobb for the next part of the match. Taylor continued working Cobb’s arm, while Kratos periodically came in to keep his team with the advantage in the match.

Kratos, who did a short tour with AJPW earlier this year before the pandemic, looked like a monster here. As he should have. He threw a giant running lariat at Cobb in the corner and he bellowed like Colossus in the X-Men arcade game while doing it. After launching Cobb with a vertical suplex and squashing him back in the corner with a Stinger Splash, Taylor tagged back in and went back after the arm.

Cobb rallied back 10 minutes into the match with a massive German suplex, rocketing Taylor across the ring. He then tagged out to Romero, who went after Taylor, though Rust laid Romero out eventually with more technical arm-centric offense at one point. He landed something I’d call a “armcracker,” where he basically did a backcracker while Rocky was in a top wristlock.

Taylor eventually tagged out to Kratos again, immediately knocking Cobb off the apron, then walked over and planted Romero with another big vertical suplex for two.

The finish saw Romero throw a last-minute flurry of strikes, then attempted Sliced Bread, but Kratos blocked it and reversed into a sitout Death Valley Driver, the same one Shinsuke Nakamura does. He then put Romero away in emphatic style with a wheelbarrow suplex that launched Romero backwards into the air. Big win for both Taylor and Kratos, the latter in his debut, nonetheless.

Kratos and Cobb jawjacked with each other in the ring afterwards. Taylor then attacked Romero, locking on a wristlock, while Kratos beat down Cobb before the show ended.

Backstage, Cobb talked about how he used to know Kratos, how they had travelled 700-800 miles up and down the road together, but now that Kratos, the former “God of War” as he was called on the West Coast indies has arrived, Cobb is now “ready for war.”

Kevin Kelly said on commentary that though some may see this as an upset, he believes we have just begun to scratch the surface with Kratos in NJPW.

Final thoughts

”Road to Showdown” turned out to be one of the best episodes of NJPW Strong to date, with the tag team main event being a must-watch match this weekend. Next week’s episode features Fred Rosser vs “Filthy“ Tom Lawlor, Juice Robinson, Brody King & Karl Fredericks vs. Bullet Club (Jay White, Tonga Loa & Chase Owens) and PJ Black vs. Tama Tonga.