Kairi Sane’s return to WWE appears imminent, according to a report.
WrestleVotes was first to report Thursday that Kairi Sane has been added to WWE’s internal roster, signaling her impending return.
Sane, a former NXT Women’s Champion and WWE Women’s Tag Team Champion, left the company in 2021 and last wrestled for WWE in 2020. It was reported in August that she was on her way back to WWE after fulfilling the remainder of her dates in Japan. Sane finished up with Stardom in October.
After working out the remainder of her deal as a brand ambassador and commentator for WWE, Sane joined Stardom in 2022 under the name KAIRI where she competed as a special attraction on big Stardom shows.
Stardom’s parent company Bushiroad also owns NJPW, and KAIRI wrestled three matches under the NJPW banner in 2022 and 2023, including being crowned the first-ever IWGP Women’s Champion in November 2022.
KAIRI vs. Mercedes Mone for the IWGP Women’s Championship was the semi-main event of NJPW’s Battle in the Valley pay-per-view in February 2023 in San Jose, California.
KAIRI has been announced for a show with GLEAT next month.
The promotion put out a video on Wednesday announcing the former IWGP Women’s Champion for Shinjuku FACE on Wednesday, September 20, 2023. Her opponent for the show has yet to be announced.
KAIRI is expected back in WWE shortly, with our own Dave Meltzer stating earlier this month that she could return to the company in November. She announced at a press conference on August 7 that she is preparing for a “new voyage” and will be taking an indefinite hiatus after finishing up some dates. The 34-year-old is booked for the Sendai Girls’ promotion on September 2 and an All Japan show on September 9 as well.
Meltzer addressed KAIRI’s departure from Stardom and pending WWE return in the latest edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, noting that Triple H being in charge of WWE creative played a role in her decision.
Meltzer wrote:
Bushiroad wanted her exclusive. She wanted to work more dates but Bushiroad wanted exclusivity regarding the more dates which would also mean more money. Other things also came up as mentioned last week. She then talked about returning to WWE and had thoughts about returning, particularly with the success Sky has had there. She talked with those close to her who supported her leaving with the idea that if she doesn’t, she later in life would always have questions or regrets about it. She also felt things for her would be better with Levesque in charge of creative
Speaking at a press conference on Monday, the former IWGP Women’s Champion announced that she will be going on an “indefinite hiatus” as she prepares for a new chapter in her career.
“I have made a decision. I can’t say it clearly, but in preparation for a new voyage, a voyage of determination, I would like to put my activities on indefinite hiatus as of the end of September 2023. Rest assured that this is a positive decision,” KAIRI said (via @EasternLariat.
“Lastly, I would like to thank President Rossy Ogawa for not giving up on me, who was said to have no talent, everyone at Stardom who supported me, wrestlers from other organisations, the media and the fans who have always supported me. Thank you very much.”
KAIRI is believed to be heading back to WWE later this year. Our own Dave Meltzer addressed the news on Sunday’s edition of Wrestling Observer Radio.
“Maybe November,” Meltzer said regarding a return. “She’s got two more dates in Japan I think she is scheduled for…she’s coming back.”
KAIRI is scheduled to perform on the 9/8 AJPW show. She will team with Saori Anou and wrestle Unagi Sayaka and a partner yet to be announced.
Meltzer continued to address potential reasons KAIRI is leaving Stardom and returning to WWE.
“She left [WWE] because she wanted to return to Japan and then when her contract was up, she started working at Stardom. She was going to be the big international star and New Japan was going to use her to come to the United States and things like that and I think what ended up happening is then they signed Mercedes, who ended up getting hurt, but they signed Mercedes to, kind of, take that spot,” Meltzer said.
KAIRI started training with Stardom in 2011 and performed with the organization until signing with WWE in 2017. She won the Mae Young Classic that year and would go on to win the NXT Women’s Championship at TakeOver Brooklyn IV in 2018. KAIRI and Asuka won the WWE Women’s Tag Team Championships on the main roster in 2019. KAIRI announced in October 2020 that she had begun work as a WWE ambassador in Japan. Her contract then expired the following year and she returned to Stardom in February 2022 and then became the inaugural IWGP Women’s Champion in November.
AEW signings Kenny Omega, Young Bucks and Adam Page, lots behind it with comments from any going into details on the reason the decision was made, their pact to stay together and far more
WWE financials for quarter two, including why the next TV deal is taking longer to negotiate, how every sector of business is doing, USA Network with and without WWE and looks to the future
SummerSlam, why matches were changed, the huge Saturday night of events, ticket sales and more
Updating All In, where it stands on all-tie records, two straight weeks of PPV shows, the last time it happened and the history, rumored matches and more
G-1 Climax, what everyone needs to advance to the final eight, cards for the rest of the tournament and running down the shows from the past week
UFC 291 coverage, the stories behind the stories, what is next, business notes
NXT Great American Bash notes with full coverage
The life and times of Adrian Street, his death, his start, the famous photo, his U.K. heyday, why he came to the U.S., thinking wrestling was real, meeting Linda and his life after wrestling
The most detailed look at the television ratings for all the pro wrestling and MMA shows, including what the numbers mean, rankings, segment-by-segment and how shows are doing compared with one year ago.
Promotion shooting new star to the top
One of the best matches of the year in Mexico
Top pro wrestler worked as an Uber driver during the pandemic
Why Stardom is bringing back 80s and 90s legends
Wrestle Kingdom notes
Minoru Suzuki match in a unique location
Second generation star celebrates his 50th birthday on show this past week
Update on the number of homes and carriage rates for the shows that carry wrestling and MMA
More on a new television wrestling promotion starting in the fall
More matches on All In weekend in London
Who Giulia is likely defending her New Japan Strong title against next
Men’s All Japan Strong title match in Defy
Business of AEW and its value
Tony Khan talks business growth
Update on WBD business
Health updates on AEW & WWE wrestlers out of action
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Sunday Update
Our weekend show covering SummerSlam. Collision, G-1 and more is up on the site now with Bryan. Our weekly Observer and news review with Garrett is also on the site right now. Bryan and I will be back tomorrow night after Raw.
Steve McMichael’s family said that the sepsis that hospitalized him is gone, but he’s still battling pneumonia. Best of luck to McMichael.
Kairi still has a few Japanese dates left to fulfill before she starts back with her new WWE contract.
WWE will be sending out a press release in the morning. I believe it will list the SummerSlam gate and whether it broke the domestic non-Mania gate record ($7.3 million) or the overall non-Mania gate record ($8.1 million at Clash of the Castle last year). Either way it was super successful and would be either 10th or 11th place all-time depending on if it beat the Clash of the Castle number.
Dakota Kai is not close to ready to return. She was brought in to congratulate Iyo Sky on winning the WWE women’s title.
We’re looking for your thoughts on SummerSlam, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to [email protected]
Konnan said that the rules for the four-way with Rush, Psycho Clown, LA Park and Sam Adonis as the TripleMania main event for this coming Saturday in Mexico City at Arena Ciudad will be a first person getting pinned or submitted losing his hair or mask.
The one thing about the Paul Brothers is that their actual fights, as opposed to Logan’s pro wrestling matches, do garner a lot of interest. It doesn’t always translate to PPV buys but as far as curiosity goes, last night Jake Paul vs. Nate Diaz fight was the biggest thing by far of the week as far as Google searches with five million. For a comparison, SummerSlam had 200,000 which on the surface sounds very low (it’s the usual number for a WWE major event) but with the way they’ve been tabulating it’s not as concerning. SummerSlam was sixth for the Friday/Saturday weekend. lBut it does tell you just how much more general public interest there was in the fight. The UFC show had Tatiana Suarez at No. 9 and Cory Sandhagen at No. 11 yesterday. The other pro wrestling, boxing or MMA related stuff that placed this ast week were Steve McMichael at No. 12 on Friday, Diaz vs. Paul at No. 4 on Thursday and Vince McMahon (for being investigated) at No. 6 on Wednesday.
Nick Diaz issued a challenge to either of the Paul Brothers after Nate’s loss to Paul.
As mentioned on the show last night, Brock Lesnar will be off for a while. We’re not clear when he’s scheduled to return but that was not his farewell. For Ronda Rousey, that was her farewell at least for now. She’s not expected back at any specific date and that’s why she did that finish with Shayna Baszler where she got choked out.
Also looking for reports from the N-1 tournament earlier today in Yokohama. The first night of NOAH’s version of G-1 saw:
Shuji Kondo & Seiki Yoshioka & Stallion Rogers b Anthony Greene & Yo-Hey & Tadasuke
Manabu Soya b Katsuhiko Nakajima
Jack Morris b Yoshiki Inamura
Lance Anoa’i b Yuma Anzai
Yuki Yoshioka b Masa Kitamiy
Naomichi Marufuji & Atsushi Kotoge & Hi 69 b Kazuyuki Fujita & Amakusa & Junta Miyawaki
El Hijo de Dr. Wagner Jr. b Daiki Inaba
Adam Brooks b Kenoh
Go Shiozaki b Saxon Huxley
Jake Lee b Timothy Thatcher
The show aired live on Wrestle Universe and the first three bouts are on YouTube.
WrestleTix has the attendance for SummerSlam at 51,477. It was crazy to see that Nick Khan said 43,000 tickets were sold on Wednesday at the investors call and while they did move a few thousand in the last few days, then announcing the 59,000+ number a few days later.
All In’s ticket advance yesterday surpassed the final number of the famous Hogan vs. Andre WrestleMania III attendance at the Pontiac Silverdome. It is now fourth place on the all-time list of paid shows, six if you include the two shows in North Korea.
The G-1 Climax tournament has the C block final day on Tuesday. The C block winner faces Will Ospreay in the first round of the playoffs on Thursday in Funabashi. The second place finisher in C block faces Sanada in the first round of the playoffs.
Because I was watching Collision and SummerSlam and then did a show, I haven’t watched G-1 yet this weekend, but we got a lot of feedback from people raving about Ospreay vs. El Phantasmo generally calling it the match of the weekend.
Dennis Condrey was at Collision yesterday in Greenville, SC, and after the show was over, FTR and C.M.Punk brought it up and they brought Condrey in the ring. Punk also put over Ricky Steamboat and Condrey. Dax Harwood said Condrey changed the course of tag team wrestling and how because Condrey worked 300 days a year to get tag team wrestling over, he can be home with his family five days a week. Condrey said that FTR was the best tag team in the world and thanked FTR for keeping their name alive and having the similar music.
Fast nationals for Collision were 388K/0.12. Actual numbers won’t be out until Tuesday but it does show that SummerSlam likely drew a very large percentage of the usual AEW audience. UFC and Paul vs. Diaz didn’t help, but it does look like AEW is going to be hurt once a month on Saturdays against WWE major events.
Tom Lawlor vs. Shigehiro Irie will be on Saturday’s Defy show at Washington Hall in Seattle.
LuFisto, who deleted her Twitter after negative feedback to her comments on the AEW women’s locker room, which saw a lot of the AEW women respond denying it, has pulled out of her next Sunday Americanrana show in Worcester, MA. They are looking for an opponent for Dan Barry, who she was scheduled to face.
Adam Wilcox noted to us that he purchased both All In and All Out from FITE (which handles the overseas PPV) and didn’t get any FITE credits for early purchases. He asked and was told that FITE no longer offers FITE credits for those who buy PPVs in advance as they previously had.
Capital Championship Wrestling ran last night in Paulsboro, NJ at the Monster Factory. The Renegade Twins who were in a tournament pulled out because they were booked for last night’s ROH tapings and another wrestler pulled out to work the WOW tapings in Los Angeles: Harleen Lopez b Damaris Dawkins, JC Storm b Clara Carreras, Sara Leon b Miranda Vignette, Ultra Violette won four-way over champion Christina Marie, Delmi Exo and Jade to win the CCW women’s title. (thanks to Shannon Walsh)
DOA All Women’s show from last night in Portland, OR with Queen of Thorns tournament bouts: Amira b Bambi Hall, Nicole Matthews b Murphy Madsen, Abigail Warren b Tara Zep, Liiza Hall Izzy McQueen, Amira b Nicole Matthews, Abigail Warren b Liiza Hall, Rebel Kel b Shazzma McKenzie to keep the Grand championship, Nick Radford b Kel to win the title, Amira b Warren to win the tournament.
GCW on Friday night in Detroit: Jordan Oliver won over Adrian Alanis, Caleb Konley, Jimmy Lloyd, Shane Mercer and Rico Gonzalez, Masha Slamovich b Alec Price, Dominic Garrini & Kevin Ku b Ciclope Miedo Xtremo, Sawyer Wreck b Parrow, Komander b Joey Janela, John Wayne Murdoch & Reed Bentley b Mance Warner & andes, Cole Radrick b Crazy King, Effy & Allie Katch b Davey Bang & August Matthews, Blake Christian b Mike Bailey to retain the GCW title (thanks to Leonard Brand)
PWInsider reported on Sunday that KAIRI is set to return to the company. Dave Meltzer confirmed the news on Wrestling Observer Radio Sunday morning.
“Maybe November,” Meltzer said regarding a return. “She’s got two more dates in Japan I think she is scheduled for…she’s coming back.”
KAIRI posted a video on X Saturday evening announcing that she will be holding a press conference “tomorrow”, without specifying a specific date or time.
“I want to tell you something,” the video said in English. “I will have a press conference tomorrow and will be streaming on YouTube right after. Thank you so much.”
She also made a surprise appearance on Sunday morning’s All Japan Pro Wrestling event, announcing she will be teaming with Saori Anou to take on Unagi Sayaka and a partner on AJPW’s September 8 show.
KAIRI, who wrestled as Kairi Sane in WWE from 2017 to 2020, left the United States in July of 2020 and worked as an ambassador for the company during the COVID-19 pandemic. She officially left WWE in December of 2021 after her contract expired.
In the last year, KAIRI has wrestled for both Stardom and New Japan Pro Wrestling. She became the first IWGP Women’s Champion, defeating Mayu Iwatani in November of last year. At NJPW’s Battle in the Valley event in February of this year, Mercedes Mone defeated KAIRI to win the championship.
Figure Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including Tom’s trip to the whaling museum, our upcoming match for Black Label Pro, Smackdown with Jey Uso explaining what’s up, and New Japan Strong with Mercedes vs. Kairi in the main event! A fun show as always so check it out~!
Mercedes Mone is set to make her in-ring NJPW debut at Battle in the Valley as part of the show’s double main event.
Mone challenges KAIRI for the IWGP Women’s Championship in one of the two top matches. KAIRI was crowned the inaugural title holder in November, then was confronted by Mone after making her first title defense at Wrestle Kingdom 17.
Two of the greatest of all time square off in the other half of the double main event, as Kazuchika Okada defends the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship against Hiroshi Tanahashi. Okada holds a 7-5 career edge over Tana, and the two have also had three draws in their 15 career singles meetings.
The rest of the card includes a Loser Leaves NJPW match between Jay White and Eddie Kingston, as well as three additional title matches:
NJPW World Television Championship: Zack Sabre Jr. (c) vs. Clark Connors
Filthy Rules match: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor vs. Homicide
Loser Leaves NJPW: Jay White vs. Eddie Kingston
NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship: Motor City Machine Guns (c) vs. West Coast Wrecking Crew
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Fred Rosser (c) vs. KENTA
Josh Alexander, Mascara Dorada, Adrian Quest & Rocky Romero vs. KUSHIDA, Volador Jr., Kevin Knight & The DKC
The kickoff show lineup:
David Finlay vs. Bobby Fish
JR Kratos vs. Alex Coughlin
Our live coverage begins with the kickoff show at 9:20 p.m. Eastern time.
**********
**Kickoff Show**
Alex Coughlin defeated JR Kratos
The match was well-structured, and once I could hear them, the crowd was well into this one. The problem is that on my Fite feed, there was no audio. I had to put the YouTube feed on to hear the crowd. The fact that New Japan and Fite continue to have issues with audio this far into their relationship is embarrassing. If I were New Japan, I would send my own crew to do the show. This is minor-league nonsense that can easily be remedied.
There’s no audio to start on my Fite feed. Kratos charged Coughlin with a shoulder block at what I assume was the bell. Kratos went for a big corner splash, but Coughlin caught him and drove shoulders into him in the corner. Coughlin brought Kratos to the top rope before sweeping his feet out and dropping him neck first on the top rope. Kratos cut Coughlin off by flinging him into the ropes before launching him with a suplex.
Kratos laid in the shots to Coughlin in the center of the ring, but Coughlin fought back with strikes of his own. A bodyslam attempt didn’t work, and Kratos soon cut Coughlin off with a lariat. A deadlift vertical suplex scored for Kratos for a nearfall. Coughlin cut off a charge to the corner before leapfrogging Kratos and trying for a German suplex. No luck there, but Coughlin did muscle Kratos up for a bridging fallaway slam for a nearfall.
Coughlin deadlifted Kratos for a gutwrench suplex to a large pop – a pop I heard on the YouTube feed for the pre-show. Coughlin laid in heavy palm strikes before dropping Kratos with a lariat. Kratos cut off another German attempt with a Pele kick. Both men recovered and had a strike exchange that Kratos won with a jumping knee and a lariat for a nearfall. Kratos hit a superman elbow in the corner before bringing Coughlin to the top rope. Coughlin escaped a superplex attempt before finally getting Kratos up and over for the German suplex for the win in just over ten minutes.
David Finlay defeated Bobby Fish
After a lockup exchange, Finlay got the first bit of offense with a dropkick for a quick cover. Fish took control of Finlay’s arm on the mat before transitioning into a headlock of his own. Fish laid in the knees, but Finlay slid out of the way of the inside-out senton. Finlay went to the floor after Fish, but Fish caught him with a dragon screw leg whip into the barricade.
Back in the ring, Fish got a nearfall off of a sliding lariat. A bodyslam and another dragon screw out of the corner for Fish. Fish did more work on the leg as the five-minute call was announced. A running elbow got a nearfall as Fish kept control. Fish locked in a single-leg crab in the center of the ring, but Finlay powered out and countered a single-leg takedown into a La Magistral cradle for two. Finlay caught Fish with a backbreaker but hurt his own knee in the process.
Finlay ducked a big roundhouse kick and dropped Fish with a lariat. Neckbreaker from Finlay scored a two count. Fish grabbed the hair to get out of a side suplex before hammering Finlay with shots, but Finlay took him down with an uppercut. Finlay hit a Blue Thunder Bomb for a nearfall and tried to follow it with the Trash Panda, but his knee gave out. Fish hit a belly-to-belly suplex into the turnbuckle pad for a nearfall. Fish applied a sleeper hold, but Finlay rolled Fish in a pin to get out of it. Finlay transitioned a backslide into the Trash Panda for the win.
**Main Card**
After a 43-minute delay due to technical issues, the show begins. Ian Riccoboni and Matt Rehwoldt are on the call, with Scott D’Amore joining them for the opener.
Kushida, Kevin Knight, The DKC & Volador Jr. defeated Mascara Dorada, Josh Alexander, Adrian Quest & Rocky Romero
This was a fun opener that got me back into the mood for wrestling after the delay. Knight continues to be an impressive prospect for New Japan, with his athleticism jumping off the page.
The DKC has personalized gear, signifying possible graduation from the dojo. Rocky Romero came out with the CMLL World Welterweight Championship that he and Volador have been feuding over. Alexander came out with the Impact World Title that Kushida will be challenging for over Wrestlemania Weekend at the Multiverse United show. D’Amore announced that the Multiverse United show has sold out, so a little breaking news there.
Kushida and Alexander started for their teams, trading submission hold attempts before they locked each other in ankle locks simultaneously. Knight and Quest tagged in for their teams, with Quest taking control with a springboard crossbody and a headscissors for a nearfall. Quest tagged in his mentor Romero, but Knight tagged Volador in. That sent Romero scurrying to the corner to tag Dorada, who engaged in a hot lucha encounter. Dorada walked the ropes to dropkick Volador. Romero blind-tagged his way in to lay the boots to Volador, but Volador took control and sent both men out of the ring. Kushida and Alexander tagged back in, with Alexander scoring a nearfall with a Northern Lights Suplex.
Kushida got caught in the wrong corner, getting worked on by team Alexander. Kushida hit a double handspring to Romero and Quest before tagging out to DKC. DKC laid in the chops to Quest and Dorada before taking them both out with a dive to the floor. DKC hit a flying kick to Quest for a nearfall. The match broke down into an eight-way before Kushida and Knight hit a doomsday dropkick – with Knight jumping from the mat – for a nearfall.
A string of dives left Kushida and Alexander in the ring. Kushida caught Alexander in the Hoverboard Lock, which allowed Knight to hit a pendulum DDT to DKC for the win. Volador and Romero got into a short brawl after the match, with Volador sending Romero to the floor. Volador challenged Romero to a future hair match.
STRONG Openweight Championship: Kenta defeated Fred Rosser to win the title
A hard-hitting battle with a finish that took a bit away from it. I get that they did it to give Rosser a new feud after a long title reign, but in a good match like this, I prefer to have a clean win.
Kenta paint-brushed Rosser while breaking an opening waistlock. Kenta gave Rosser some nonchalant kicks in the corner, so Rosser got out of the ring and challenged Kenta to a fight in the crowd. Kenta obliged, kicking Rosser hard before booting him over the barricade. Kenta laid in more kicks and laid Rosser out with a DDT on the apron.
Kenta and Rosser traded strikes in the corner before Kenta kicked Rosser square in the back for a two count. Kenta kept baiting Rosser in to take big shots, landing a DDT for another nearfall. Rosser fired up, carrying Kenta to the corner and dropping him with chops and hip attacks. Rosser landed a squisher for a nearfall. Kenta clawed at Rosser’s eyes before dropping him with another DDT. A lariat off the top rope scored another nearfall for Kenta. Kenta sent Rosser to the apron and landed a big boot, but Rosser grabbed Kenta and dropped him with a backbreaker on the apron. Rosser followed it with a seated senton to the floor. The clothesline in the ring from Rosser got another nearfall.
Kenta reversed an STF attempt into Game Over. Rosser got to the ropes, where Kenta promptly dropped him with the Green Killer hanging DDT. Kenta dropped Rosser with a running boot and a shotgun dropkick, before landing the double stomp for a nearfall. With CM Punk in the crowd, Kenta went for the Go To Sleep, but Rosser slipped out and locked on the Crossface Chickenwing. Kenta grabbed the ref and pulled him into the pile to force Rosser to break the hold. Rosser won a strike exchange with a rolling elbow for a nearfall.
Kenta sent Rosser into the referee. Rosser forced Kenta to submit with the STF, but the referee was still down. Juice Robinson made his way to ringside and knocked Rosser out with a roll of quarters. Kenta then grabbed Rosser and hit Go To Sleep to win the match and the title.
This was a solid match for its spot on the card. It’s always a welcome sight to see the Machine Guns, and the Wrecking Crew accounted for themselves well in this spot.
The Wrecking Crew jumped the Guns to start, but the Guns sent them out of the ring. The Guns followed them, but Isaacs carried Sabin a full lap around the ring in a delayed vertical suplex before dropping him on the apron. Nelson had suplexed Shelley in the ring, and they both worked on Shelley’s knee while Sabin was down. Nelson made his way to the top rope, but Sabin shoved him to the mat. Shelley fought them both off before tagging out to Sabin.
Sabin was a house of fire, taking out both men before hitting a top-rope crossbody on Nelson for a nearfall. After Shelley helped send both Isaacs and Nelson to the floor, Shelley held open the ropes for a Sabin dive to the floor. A missile dropkick sent Nelson into a Sabin facebuster for a nearfall. Sabin booted Shelley by accident, allowing Nelson to hit a top rope elbow to Shelley. A Spicolli Driver into Nelson’s knees got Isaacs a nearfall. Isaacs dropped Sabin with a German suplex, with Nelson following with a cutter for a nearfall. Sabin escapes a double team, which allowed the Guns to hit the Dream Sequence on Isaacs. The Guns hit their double team Made In Japan for the win.
Loser Leaves New Japan: Eddie Kingston defeated Jay White
A stellar contest that got the emotion and fire you would want in a Loser Leaves Town match. Jay White’s New Japan career had incredibly high highs, and disappointing lows, but this was one hell of a match to end it with.
After Juice Robinson’s interference in the Strong Openweight Title match, Bullet Club has been banned from ringside or else White will be automatically disqualified.
White stalled early on, baiting Kingston in to drop his neck on the ropes, but Kingston countered with a heavy chop that sent White to the floor. White came back in and dropped Kingston with a chop of his own before driving him into the corner. Kingston took another heavy chop but fired back with a big STO. Kingston clubbered on White, repeatedly dropping him with heavy chops. White got back in control with a DDT and a suplex into the corner. White hit the Blade Buster for a nearfall.
White started toying with Kingston, but Kingston fired back quickly before White clawed at Kingston’s eyes. Kingston fought out of a uranage and hit an exploder suplex and a short-arm clothesline for a two count. Kingston laid more chops into White, sending him out of the ring with one as the crowd chanted Kingston’s name. White kept walking into chops with a smile on his face before landing in the corner and taking more chops. White leaned into more chops, but baited Kingston into a Backfist attempt that he ducked. White dropped Kingston with a facebuster and a disgusting high-angle German suplex, before scoring a nearfall with a lariat.
White hit a nasty uranage for a nearfall. White set up for the half-and-half suplex, but Kingston fought out with chops. They battled with chops in the center of the ring before Kingston sent White into the corner and hammered him with the machine gun chops in the corner. White took Kingston into the corner and hit his own machine gun chops, but Kingston just kept chopping White. White had enough and clawed at Kingston’s eyes before dropping him with the half-and-half suplex. White went for the Blade Runner, but Kingston clawed at White’s eyes. Kingston shoved the ref away, allowing White to hit a low blow. White hit the Blade Runner, but the momentum sent Kingston rolling to the floor to a massive pop.
White dragged Kingston back into the ring, but only got a nearfall. After arguing with the referee, White walked into a backfist from Kingston for a close nearfall. Kingston offered White a fist bump, but White spat on him instead. Kingston hit a second and a third backfist, a half-and-half suplex, a fourth backfist, and a Northern Lights Driver for…White to kick out at two to a huge reaction. Kingston brought White up, gave him a hug, and hit another Northern Lights Driver to win and end Jay White’s New Japan Pro Wrestling career.
After the match, as White was getting “Thank You Jay” chants, White’s longtime rival David Finlay slid into the ring and drilled White with the shillelagh. Finlay cursed White for wasting the opportunity that he had and lamented that he was an outsider no matter where he went in the world. He warned the rest of New Japan that he belonged in the ring as a fourth-generation wrestler and that he was coming to take over the wrestling world.
Filthy Rules: Tom Lawlor defeated Homicide
This was long and was full of a lot of plunder. The right guy won.
Filthy Rules is a no-disqualification match with the ropes taken down.
Lawlor spent a comical amount of time getting ready, taking off a full gi and putting on fight gloves before Homicide hit a lariat for a quick nearfall. Lawlor sent Homicide to the floor and hit a kick from the ring before hitting Homicide with a trash can lid. Lawlor went for a big run down the ramp, but Homicide caught him with a chair to the face. In the ring, Homicide hit an exploder suplex for a nearfall before sending Lawlor into the ring post.
Homicide hit Lawlor with baking trays and a DDT before grabbing plunder from under the ring. He pulled out a ladder, a kendo stick, and several forks. Lawlor recovered and locked Homicide in a cloverleaf, but Homicide stabbed Lawlor in the feet with the fork to get out. Homicide hit a cutter for a nearfall. Lawlor reversed a throw and sent Homicide into the ring post before diving onto Homicide on the floor. Lawlor grabbed a set of silver knuckles and hit several body shots before putting Homicide back in the ring.
Lawlor fish-hooked Homicide with one of the turnbuckles, before missing a Superman Punch into the ring post. Homicide dropped Lawlor with a neckbreaker for a nearfall, but Lawlor dumped Homicide onto a trash can for a nearfall of his own. Lawlor teased a move into a door at ringside, but Homicide hit a pair of vertical suplexes. They traded suplexes for a while before Lawlor hit an enzuigiri and a set of knees. Lawlor locked on a choke, but Homicide picked him up and drove him through the door with a Death Valley Driver.
Homicide hit a piledriver onto the door for a nearfall. Homicide went for the Cop Killa, but Lawlor rolled out and eventually backdropped Homicide into a ladder. A chair to the face followed by a Penalty Kick got a nearfall for Lawlor. Lawlor hit Homicide with assorted plunder before hitting a diving headbutt off of a ladder onto a chair on Homicide’s head. That only got a two-count, so Lawlor hit the NKOTB and locked on a rear-naked choke for the win.
This didn’t have the energy I was hoping for from these TV Title matches. There was a lack of urgency, and the crowd wasn’t into this one until the closing minutes. The last few minutes were very good, and the challenge made afterward leads to a match that I am looking forward to.
A 15-minute time limit for this match, the case for all TV Title matches.
After Connors gave a clean break, the two traded uppercuts. Connors took Sabre down with a shoulder block. Sabre opened himself up for chops from Connors, who obliged with a heavy shot. After more strikes, Sabre countered a hip toss into a Cobra Twist. He transitioned into a neck crank, then took his time transitioning into a sideways surfboard before Connors got to the ropes. Connors fought back with more chops before Sabre dropped him with a boot at the five-minute call.
Sabre laid on more arm work, but Connors was able to gain some momentum and hit a pounce. Connors hit a spear in the corner, but Sabre came back with a flying front facelock. Connors hit a Northern Lights throw to get out of it before booting Sabre in the face for a nearfall. Sabre took a wristlock and quickly dropped Connors to the mat by his arm. Sabre cut off a strike exchange with a kick to the arm, but Connors came back with a brainbuster for a nearfall. Connors lined Sabre up for a spear, but Sabre hooked Connors’ arm for a Fujiwara armbar. Sabre continued to transition, but Connors got to the ropes at the ten-minute call.
Connors caught a Penalty Kick, taking several slaps from Sabre before hitting a headbutt. Sabre countered a strike with a big suplex for a nearfall. Sabre hit heavy kicks, but Connors caught him with a spear and a powerslam for a nearfall. Three minutes left, as Connors countered a running European uppercut with a backslide for two. A powerbomb from Connors got another nearfall.
Two minutes left as Sabre went for the European Clutch, but Connors caught Sabre in a choke. Both men transitioned submissions, with Connors locking on an Ankle Lock with one minute remaining. But as soon as the call came, Sabre pulled Connors into a disgusting armbar for the immediate tapout.
After the match, Kevin Knight confronted Sabre and seemed to make a challenge for the title.
A match that earned its position on the card. These two were treated like legitimate superstars, with the crowd alive for this one from the pre-match video package. This was hard-hitting and vicious from the jump, and they never lost the crowd in this twenty-five-minute battle. An excellent match, and an excellent start to Mercedes Mone’s post-WWE career. Mone summarily and professionally walked into San Jose and put on a true superstar performance. Highly recommend this one.
Mone came out in Hana Kimura-inspired gear to the biggest reaction of the night. Dueling chants as the bell rang for this one, as the energy returned to the building in full. Mone quickly springboarded into the Bank Statement, but Kairi escaped. After a Greco-Roman knuckle lock, Kairi caught Mone with a headscissors that sent her to the outside. Kairi followed with a running forearm before sending Mone back into the ring and hammering her with a chop. Mone countered with a flurry of chops and a lucha armdrag. Mone hit a Meteora in the corner for a nearfall.
Mone went for another armdrag, but Kairi cut her off on the top rope and set her down in the Tree of Woe. Kairi went to the top rope, but Mone cut her off and did a handstand out of the Tree of Woe. Mone sent Kairi into the post before dropping her chin-first on the buckle. Another post shot from Mone got a nearfall once they got back into the ring. Mone talked trash before slapping Kairi in the face. Mone dropped Kairi with a DDT for a nearfall, holding onto the arm on the kickout. Kairi got a rollup for two, but Mone cut her off with a clothesline. Mone stood on Kairi as she was hung over the ropes before dropping the arm over her knees for a nearfall.
Mone sat Kairi in the Tree of Woe and repeatedly kicked her in the chest. Mone went to send Kairi into the post again, but Kairi pulled Mone into the post instead. Kairi dumped Mone into the post again but got greedy and got sent into the post herself. We got a countout tease, before Mone dropped Kairi down by the arm again. Mone sent Kairi to the top rope, but Kairi cut her off and hit a double stomp to Mone’s chest.
Kairi hit a running neckbreaker and the Interceptor spear before hitting the basement forearm. Kairi hit the forearm off the top rope for a nearfall. Kairi locked on a submission that forced Mone to the ropes. At the fifteen-minute call, Mone booted Kairi off the apron and hit a Meteora to the floor. Mone hit another Meteora in the ring, but only got a two count to her shock. A Bank Statement attempt got countered into a pair of pinfall attempts before Kairi caught Mone in The Anchor submission hold. Mone rolled Kairi through into the Bank Statement, but Kairi got to the ropes. Mone hit the ropes and ran right into a Cutlass from Kairi for a nearfall.
Kairi hit the Alabama Slam to set up the Insane Elbow, but Mone grabbed Kairi’s leg and rolled out to the apron. Kairi hit the ropes, but Mone rolled through and hit a belly-to-Bayley for a nearfall to Bayley chants. Mone hit two of the Three Amigos, but Kairi countered the third into a DDT. A strike exchange ended in the referee getting hit with a Cutlass. They brawled onto the stage, with Mone rolling off of the stage. Kairi went for a running forearm, but Mone caught her and dropped her onto a speaker near the stage. Mone pulled out a table from under the stage and set Kairi up for a suplex off of the speaker, but Kairi slipped under and powerbombed Mone through the table to a huge pop.
At the twenty-five-minute call, Kairi went to the top rope for the Insane Elbow, but flew into the boots of Mone. Mone went to the top herself for a frog splash but caught the knees of Kairi. Kairi locked on a crossface, which forced Mone to bite her way out. Mone got Kairi in position for the Mone Maker, and hit the DDT clean for the win and the title.
Okada/Tanahashi is like a fine wine. It always ages well. This wasn’t the most spectacular of their encounters, but an average Okada/Tanahashi match is still a fantastic main event.
After the opening exchange, Tanahashi caught Okada with the dragon screw out of the corner. Okada came back by getting Tanahashi to the top rope and hitting the big dropkick. Okada sent Tanahashi into the barricade and into the apron with charges. Tanahashi caught Okada with strikes, but Okada dropped Tanahashi with a DDT on the ramp. Another DDT from Okada in the ring got a nearfall. Go Ace chants rained down as Okada dropped Tanahashi with a neckbreaker. Okada posed over Tanahashi to boos.
Tanahashi came back with a running forearm and strikes before hitting the senton off the second rope. Tanahashi countered an Okada boot with a Dragon Screw that sent Okada to the floor. Tanahashi hit the Aces High from the top rope to the floor, taking both men out. Tanahashi brought Okada back into the ring but got caught with a flapjack from Okada. Okada charged Tanahashi in the corner, but Tanahashi dropkicked the leg out from under him. Okada caught Tanahashi with the neckbreaker over the knee, and after shaking out the knee, he hit the elbow off the top rope. Rainmaker pose, but Tanahashi fought out of the hold. Okada locked Tanahashi in the Money Clip – which the announcers didn’t seem to realize was a big move – before Tanahashi got to the ropes.
Tanahashi ducked a clothesline and hit a straight jacket German for a nearfall. Tanahashi hit the Slingblade for another nearfall. He hit the High Fly Flow to the back, but a second one to the front caught knees from Okada. A strike exchange saw both men rise to their feet before Tanahashi caught Okada with a shot that staggered him. Okada fought back with a shotgun dropkick, but Tanahashi came back with a slap. Tanahashi hit the ropes but got caught with a picture-perfect dropkick that brought the fans to their feet.
Okada hit the Landslide, but Tanahashi fought the Rainmaker off before countering it with a Slingblade. Tanahashi went to the top rope for a High Fly Flow, but Okada dropkicked him out of the air. Okada went for the Rainmaker, but Tanahashi caught him with a small package for a close nearfall. Okada hit the enzuigiri and the Cobra Flowsion before finally landing the Rainmaker to retain.
After the match, Okada thanked the crowd for the support before suggesting that he and Tanahashi reform their dream tag team and challenge for the IWGP Tag Team Titles, a suggestion that got a huge pop from the crowd. Mercedes Mone came out to thank the crowd before suggesting that she and Okada make their own dream team. They posed for the photo op to close the show.
Mercedes Mone spoke to NJPW ahead of her match with KAIRI next month at Battle in the Valley.
During the interview, which you can see below, Mone said that she had come to Japan because KAIRI had something that she wanted, the IWGP Women’s Championship. The two will meet at New Japan’s upcoming event in San Jose on February 18.
“I’ve never been more excited, more nervous, which I never get nervous,” she said. “But I’m so ready for this. I’ve been dreaming of this. And for it to be in the United States, in San Jose? I have so much history there. I’ve had the greatest matches there. So February 18 is going to be the same. I’m going to make sure that is the greatest women’s match of all time and when I hold up my championship, oh, cute little KAIRI. I’m about to send KAIRI back to Japan and she can go back to Stardom. I’m about to take that title everywhere. Not just New Japan, everywhere.”
Mone said that she got hooked on Japanese wrestling when she was around 12 or 13 years old, watching tapes of such stars as Manami Toyota and Aja Kong.
“WWE was amazing growing up, that got me hooked. But the Japanese women’s wrestling told myself that I could do this.”
She also put over her history with KAIRI, noting in the past she has also faced top women’s wrestlers in Japan such as Kana (Asuka) and Io (IYO SKY).
“I have a long history with KAIRI,” she said. “And I am here to take what’s mine, and that is global recognition of who I am. And you can bank on mone.”
Mone, the former Sasha Banks, made her debut on January 4 at Wrestle Kingdom 17 by attacking KAIRI after she successfully defended the IWGP Women’s Championship against Tam Nakano. It was there she issued the challenge for Battle in the Valley on February 18.
Mercedes Mone’s first NJPW match has now been made official.
NJPW has confirmed that the former Sasha Banks will challenge KAIRI for the IWGP Women’s Championship at Battle in the Valley on Saturday, February 18. The show will be available as a Fite TV pay-per-view with English commentary.
The title match was set up when Mone made her NJPW debut at Wrestle Kingdom 17. Following KAIRI’s IWGP Women’s Championship defense against Tam Nakano, Mone confronted KAIRI and laid her out. Mone announced that she’s coming to both NJPW and Stardom, declaring herself as “the standard, the conversation, the blueprint, and the CEO” of the women’s division.
Mone told KAIRI to enjoy the IWGP Women’s Championship while she still has it — because Mone is going to leave her bankrupt at Battle in the Valley.
In her post-show comments after Wrestle Kingdom, Mone said this is just her first stop — because she’s on a “world domination tour.”
Wrestle Kingdom was Mone’s first pro wrestling appearance since walking out of WWE last May.
KAIRI, who was formerly known as Kairi Sane in WWE, was crowned as the inaugural IWGP Women’s Champion this past November.
Battle in the Valley is taking place at the San Jose Civic in San Jose, California. KAIRI vs. Mone is the first match that’s been announced for the event.
The IWGP Women’s Championship tournament finals are set.
Mayu Iwatani vs. Kairi will determine the first-ever title holder. They will meet in the tournament finals at NJPW x Stardom Historic X-over on November 20 from Tokyo’s Ariake Arena.
Iwatani defeated Utami Hayashishita and Kairi defeated Jazzy Gabert in the tournament semi-finals held Sunday on the first night of the Goddesses of Stardom Tag League 2022.
This will be the sixth time the two have met in singles competition. The last came in 2017 when Iwatani defeated Kairi to win the Wonder of Stardom title. Iwatani leads their all-time head-to-head singles match series 3-2.
IWGP Women’s Championship tournament results:
Jazzy Gabert defeated Ava White (October 2) (Quarter-final)
Mayu Iwatani defeated Momo Watanabe (October 22) (Quarter-final)
KAIRI has been announced for NJPW’s IWGP Women’s Championship tournament.
STARDOM revealed on Thursday that KAIRI, formerly Kairi Hojo in Japan and Kairi Sane in WWE, will be a semifinals participant in the tournament’s international bracket, and has received a first round bye.
KAIRI is the 3rd entrant in the IWGP Women’s Title tournament in the International Bracket!#Stardom
KAIRI will face the winner of Alpha Female vs. Ava White on October 23 on a STARDOM Tag League event, with the winner advancing to the finals at NJPW X STARDOM Historic X-Over on November 20. The winner of the tournament will be crowned the first IWGP Women’s Champion.
KAIRI-> International Superstar-> International Bracket#Stardom
In all, seven participants will take part in the tournament. Gabbert will face White at NJPW Royal Quest in London on Sunday October 2 in a first round match in the international bracket. In the tournament’s STARDOM bracket, the first round participants will be determined by the standings of STARDOM’s 5 Star Grand Prix, and will square off on October 22 on a STARDOM show.
The creation of the IWGP Women’s title was announced on July 29 at an NJPW press conference. The company later revealed that after the first champion is crowned on November 20, the first title defense will take place at Wrestle Kingdom 17 on January 4, 2023.
While primarily an NJPW title, the IWGP Women’s title is also expected to be defended on big STARDOM shows.
KAIRI is off this weekend’s Stardom x Stardom pay-per-view due to testing positive for COVID-19.
The former Kairi Sane revealed her positive COVID-19 test in a statement posted to Twitter on Wednesday night. She tested positive after having a fever.
In her statement, KAIRI apologized for having to miss Stardom x Stardom.
KAIRI was scheduled to challenge Saya Kamitani for the Wonder of Stardom Championship at Stardom x Stardom. Kamitani will instead defend the title against Himeka.
“KAIRI will miss this weekend’s Stardom x Stardom ppv event due to poor physical condition. We apologize for changes to the card, and thank you for understanding,” Stardom announced.
“With KAIRI out of action this weekend, Saya Kamitani said she wants to put the Wonder of Stardom title on the line against Himeka, if she will accept. Himeka said she doesn’t get many chances like this, so she will accept, this Sunday at Stardom x Stardom 2022!”
Via a Google Translate of her interview: “Now my eardrum is torn and I can’t hear…Each technique has its own weight and the match ignited. It was a different person from the previous kid. The eardrum was torn. But I’m happy. I’m happy with the pain.”
It’s unknown how long she will be out of action.
This was her first singles match since defeating Bayley on the July 20, 2020, episode of WWE Raw. She wrestled in a tag team match at Stardom World Climax: The Best on Saturday as well, teaming with Mayu Iwatani in a win over The Cosmic Angels (Tam Nakano & Unagi Sayaka).
It was her first match back in Stardom since 2017 and first match of any kind since July 2020.
The former Kairi Sane in WWE — now going by KAIRI — returned to in-ring action for the first time since July 2020 at Stardom’s World Climax The Best earlier today in Tokyo, Japan.
KAIRI and Mayu Iwatani picked up a tag team victory over Tam Nakano and Unagi Sayaka after a signature KAIRI elbow drop and an Iwatani moonsault.
She will have her first singles match tomorrow against Starlight Kid for Stardom.
This was KAIRI’s first match for Stardom since 2017, a promotion where she had held multiple titles wrestling as Kairi Hojo. She was there from 2012 through 2017 before signing with WWE.
Her return to Stardom and new name was announced in mid-February after her contract expired last month.
She returned to Japan in July 2020 to be with her husband during the pandemic and worked for WWE as an ambassador. Prior to that, she was a standout in both NXT and the WWE main roster, holding the NXT Women’s title and the then-WWE Women’s Tag Team titles once with Asuka.