Wrestling Observer Live: CM Punk announced for Collision, Dynamite report, LAS VEGAS INSIDER

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is back with tons to talk about including last night’s AEW Dynamite, CM Punk being announced as returning and how many tickets were sold overnight, RAW ratings with BIG COMPETITION, everything you ever wanted to know about LAS VEGAS, and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Wrestling Observer Radio: Dave Meltzer & Bryan Alvarez Q&A live from Las Vegas

Live from Las Vegas, hear or watch the Q&A session from Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez.

The guys are in Sin City to cover AEW Double or Nothing and will do their usual post-event Wrestling Observer Radio in the wee hours of the morning.

Note that the Q&A starts around the 56:00 mark if you’re streaming.

Watch live on YouTube above with full audio coming shortly.

Click Here to Listen for free or watch on YouTube above.

NJPW Strong results: Jay White & Karl Anderson vs. Wheeler Yuta & Homicide

Tonight saw the first of NJPW Strong’s Autumn Attack tapings from Las Vegas, Nevada.

Shota Umino defeated QT Marshall

Umino got his full-on babyface crash course from QT Marshall in tonight’s opening bout, babyface vs. heel 101 between these two.

Usually, Marshall doesn’t do anything in the ring that I’d call out of the ordinary, but he is consistently good at eliciting negative responses from crowds. Though this always comes across better live, and it always seems to drag on television because NJPW’s production quality isn’t able to capture how loudly the crowd reacts. This style of wrestling is better in a live setting than on NJPWWorld, for sure.

Marshall earned a close two-count after a Golden Star Bomb, just like Kota Ibushi does. I’m sure people will love to read that. Umino hit a tombstone piledriver and later, he’d pick up the win after hitting the Death Rider on Marshall.

*****

JR Kratos and Danny Limelight from Team Filthy came out next. Limelight got on the mic and trashed the people of Vegas and called out “cherry boys” Aussie Open, who are current STRONG Openweight Tag Team champions. The crowd gave them a lot of heat during the promo. When Kratos grabbed the mic to speak, the mic seemed to have been cut out, so the fans started chanting “We can’t hear you!” What’s funny was that Kratos has such a powerful voice that I did, in fact, hear him, even though it was through the screen.

Kratos eventually got the mic working again and re-emphasized what Limelight said, that they essentially were owed a shot at the titles since they were in NJPW Strong and grinding far longer than some outsider team. Aussie Open then appeared on the entrance ramp and nodded in approval of they and Team Filthy squaring off for the titles in the future.

Ren Narita defeated Juice Robinson via disqualification

The “Rock Hard” one ambushed Narita on the entrance ramp as he was on his way to the ring. The ring announcer was barely into his match call when Robinson appeared, so Narita took a lengthy pre-match beating.

When the bell rang, Robinson continued beating the hell out of Narita at ringside. He even at one point grabbed the ring bell and hit Narita with it. Actually, right before that, the referee tried taking the bell out of Robinson’s hands but Robinson shoved him into the guardrail.

Soon after all this, the ref called the match and awarded the win to Narita via disqualification. Narita was covered in blood by this point.

“You shouldn’t have called me out on the internet, Narita!” Robinson said. He then proceeded to cut a pretty blue promo on Narita for calling him out (despite being a lower ranked wrestler in the NJPW system), and at the end of it, he basically offered Narita to restart the match, but as a no-DQ match. A bloodied-up Narita demanded the ref restart the match, and we were back on. Bloody Narita vs. “Rock Hard” Robinson in a no-disqualification rules match.

Ren Narita defeated Juice Robinson via submission in a no disqualification match

There was a great visual of Narita having Robinson locked in a figure four, all blood all over his face. Robinson hit Narita with a kendo stick a number of times, to the point where the stick split apart and hit the announcers at the commentary table. Ian Riccaboni even mentioned he got hit by a piece of the stick, and both announcers claimed they got some of Narita’s blood on them.

Robinson later started biting Narita’s bloody head. People in the crowd began chanting “You sick f*ck!” at Robinson, who pointed out a fan and mouthed “This is YOUR fault” before removing his belt and whipping Narita with it. Robinson is damn good in this role.

Robinson hit the Left Hand from God for two. Narita responded later by tossing Robinson a chair, then using a single-foot dropkick into the chair, smashing Robinson in the face with the chair he was holding. Narita laid in a number of elbows before Robinson was able to reverse the offensive momentum. He then grabbed a chair and stuck it in between the middle and top rope in the blue corner, but when he tried to throw Narita into it, Narita reversed the Irish whip and slammed Robinson head first into it instead.

Narita unfolded the steel chair next and used a single-arm suplex on Robinson, sending him crashing onto the chair. Narita continued hitting Robinson with the chair, but Robinson was able to catch Narita with a low blow before spiking him head-first onto the mangled chair for a very close count of two. Ten minutes had passed at this point, and the pace slowed between spots.

Finally, Robinson power bombed Narita through a table on the outside, which got a “Holy shit!” & “This is awesome!” chant from the crowd. Robinson rolled Narita back into the ring for a pin but only scored another two-count. The house energy dipped a lot from here. The crowd started chanting about wanting tables. Robinson obliged and grabbed the ring announcer’s table and threw it into the ring.

When Robinson attempted an avalanche Death Valley Bomb through a table, Narita was able to slide out of the fireman’s carry hold and slapped on a sleeper lock. This forced Robinson to come down from the top rope to attempt blocking the submission hold. Narita eventually transitioned from a sleeper to an escalera double-shoulder lock from standing rear mount, which he cranked on until Robinson tapped. Narita grabbed the win and looked awesome in doing it. Despite this going a little too long, both Robinson and Narita did a hell of a job, and I think both came out of this looking stronger and more interesting.

Bullet Club (Jay White & Karl Anderson) defeated Homicide & Wheeler Yuta

“Filthy” Tom Lawlor joined the English announce team for this one. He ended up getting into a scuffle with Homicide a few minutes into the match, with Homicide spitting water in Lawlor’s face.

White got a bloody shiner in this, with some blood visible from under his left eye.

Yuta tagged back in at around the ten-minute mark and cleaned house. Minutes later, the finish saw White hit Homicide with a Blade Runner while Homicide was distracted by Tom Lawlor, who jumped the guardrail. Doc Gallows kept referee Jeremy Marcus distracted as White laid the aforementioned Bladerunner on Homicide for the win.

After the match, chaos ensued: Lawlor came into the ring and attacked Homicide. White joined in. Yuta beat on Lawlor to defend his partner. Soon after, West Coast Wrecking Crew arrived and began beating on Yuta. Shota Umino also arrived too and would end up getting beaten on. White got on the microphone and asked Tim Filthy to “remove the trash from the ring,” referring to Homicide. He scolded fans for chanting for Jon Moxley and said he wouldn’t be showing up tonight. He also said that Eddie Kingston, who was supposed to face White in Las Vegas, got “butterflies” which is why Kingston didn’t appear (Kingston actually contracted COVID-19, which is why he had to miss the show). White hinted that maybe he’d come to meet him instead, at NJPW’s upcoming event there, Rumble on 44th St.

Afterwards, “Filthy” Tom got on the mic and addressed his hometown crowd in Las Vegas. He said Team Filthy has been carrying NJPW Strong. He then got the audience to do a “NJPW Strong” call-and-response before saying “Ganbatte! [Do your best]”! A pretty babyface promo considering what’s just gone on in the ring. Will this lead to more Bullet Club + Team Filthy team-ups in the future?

Final thoughts:

This was a decent episode of Strong, though it did feel like it dragged at times. The hardcore match was good, but it could have been chopped by five minutes; also, while the main event was good, the crowd sounded exhausted. If this were in front of a NJPW crowd in Japan, or on an AEW taping, this would have turned out much differently, and the energy would have been a lot higher. Like with any other promotion taping a series of shows in a row at a single event, NJPW Strong tapings exhaust fans, and that often impacts the overall perception of the show itself and its main events. Fussiness aside, this was a fine extended edition of NJPW Strong.

WWE Money in the Bank 2022 set for Las Vegas

WWE announced a return to Las Vegas and Allegiant Stadium for the Money in the Bank PPV on July 2 or July 3, 2022. 

During tonight’s SummerSlam show, a commercial aired promoting the event. A QR code was also shown, directing viewers to a website where they could register for ticket pre-sale information.

The date will mark the first time that Money in the Bank will be a standalone stadium show. 

In a press release, WWE President and Chief Revenue Officer Nick Khan said “Las Vegas, its residents and visitors have demonstrated that Vegas is the perfect city for our biggest events. Money in the Bank, an appropriately titled event for Vegas and one of our five annual tentpoles, will bring the WWE Universe back to Allegiant Stadium July 4th weekend 2022.”

WWE ran Allegiant Stadium for the first time with tonight’s SummerSlam event. The company announced an attendance number of 51,326 for SummerSlam, while WrestleTix estimated an actual attendance of 45,690.

Money in the Bank 2021 was held at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Texas. It was WWE’s first PPV back in front of live fans since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

UFC gets approval to run Saturday show, UFC 250 in Las Vegas

For the first time since UFC 248 on March 7th, the UFC will return to Las Vegas.

Since the pandemic began, Dana White has wanted to host shows at their APEX facility in the city but regulations by Nevada had prevented that. At a Wednesday state athletic commission meeting, they approved both this Saturday’s show and UFC 250 on June 6th in what was essentially a formality given the timeframe.

UFC made adjustments to their COVID-19 procedures following their three show return in Jacksonville, Florida, earlier this month. The NAC also approved those procedures, but many of the details are still unknown as White has previously aired concerns about sharing information with the media.

Assuming things go well from a health standpoint on those two shows, APEX will be the primary U.S.-based home for the UFC until it makes financial sense to run shows in other cities. On the international front, it was rumored this week that “Fight Island” is actually Yas Island, a massive entertainment facility in Abu Dhabi, a facility that will feature cards with all international fighters until they are cleared to return to business as usual. In both cases, running shows with fans could be quite some time away.

White has said they will meet all their commitments for events in 2020 despite having to cancel five shows due to the pandemic. The aforementioned UFC 248 was their last event with any gate revenue.

Saturday’s 11-fight show will feature Tyron Woodley vs. Gilbert Burns in the main event while UFC 250 will feature featherweight champion Amanda Nunes vs. Felicia Spencer in the main event.

Dana White: UFC events returning to Las Vegas APEX facility in May

Image: UFC

Dana White’s plan to run shows out of the UFC’s Las Vegas-based APEX facility is alive once again as the UFC president told Variety Tuesday night that they will begin running events there starting in May.

“We built the APEX facility next door just in time to save the day from this pandemic. Live fights will be produced out of there starting next month and for the foreseeable future,” he said in an email statement to the entertainment publication.

The reason that could happen is an expectation that Nevada will ease their non-essential business restrictions that extend through April 30th which would allow the company to run shows in front of empty seats. The state did not respond to Variety’s request for comment.

The news comes on the same day White told ESPN that he is planning on running a pay-per-view on Saturday, May 9th, at an yet-to-be-disclosed location, and the day after news broke that Florida has deemed sports organizations as essential businesses, opening up the door for UFC to potentially run an empty arena show there if they choose. How this would affect the mysterious “Fight Island”, if at all, is unclear.

White has had to cancel four shows thus far due to the coronavirus pandemic, including this Saturday’s UFC 249 as California governor Gavin Newsom reportedly intervened with Disney executives on not running a show on tribal land in Lemoore, CA. White said last Thursday that he had another state, governor, and commission on board even if Lemoore fell through, but was told not to move forward.

On Tuesday, White was named by President Donald Trump as one of the sports figureheads involved in a long list of business executives tasked with how to restart the country’s economy amid the pandemic.

WWE Las Vegas live results: AJ Styles vs. John Cena vs. Dean Ambrose; Curt Hawkins returns

Submitted by Dizzie Dahmer

– Dolph Ziggler beat I-C Champion The Miz (w/Maryse) in a non-title match with a roll up. Maryse was tossed by the ref.

– American Alpha & Hype Bros beat The Vaudevillians & The Ascension

– Smackdown Women’s Champion Becky Lynch, Nikki Bella beat Alexa Bliss, Carmella & Nattie in a 2 on 3 match after Lynch put Nattie in the DisArmHer. Fun match that the crowd really loved.

– Curt Hawkins defeated Apollo Crews

– Baron Corbin beat Jack Swagger

– Randy Orton defeated Bray Wyatt after reversing Sister Abigail into the RKO. Orton was loved by the crowd.

– Kane pinned Tyler Breeze in a quick match that consisted of Breeze taking a selfie with Kane, and Kane giving him a chokeslam.

– Smackdown Tag Team Champions Rhyno & Slater beat the Usos after Rhyno gored one of the Usos. Usos were trying their best to be heels but the mostly pro Cena crowd was still cheering them.

– WWE Champion AJ Styles def. John Cena and Dean Ambrose in a triple threat match. 

AJ won after taking out Ambrose with a chair and low blowing Cena for the roll-up. After the match, AJ cut his “face that run the place” promo. Ambrose ambushed him and hits him with the Dirty Deeds. Cena then gives him an AA. Cena & Ambrose took turns posing with the belt. Match was very good and excellent for a house show.

Big Audio Nightmare: New Japan G1 Climax 2016 Prediction Show

Just when you started to give up on HOPE, the optimistic attitude of mind which is the life-blood of Observer Live, NEVER FEAR!

It’s time again for the annual, arduous, infamous, more-than-famous, match-by-match, pick ’em, extravaganza that’s known as the Adam and Mike BIG CLIMAX SELECTION SHOW.

Without trying to figure it out beforehand, we go through every tournament match of the month-long, 19-show, survival of the fittest, and choose who we think will succeed in getting themselves into the final, which takes place on the final of three nights at Sumo Hall.

Plus, don’t worry, if you were hoping for Mike to bitch about people bitching about the J-Cup, there’s that too. As well as, um, cautious optimism when it comes to the rumored GM of the new Las Vegas NHL franchise. It’s the radio show that somehow got left unprotected in the audio expansion draft. It’s the Adam and Mike BIG AUDIO NIGHTMARE~!

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Ring of Honor announces 2nd show for 14th anniversary in Las Vegas

Ring of Honor announced on Wednesday that its 14th anniversary event in Las Vegas, which had already been slated as its first PPV show of 2016, will now be a full weekend.

The company announced shows for Friday, 2/26 and Saturday, 2/27, at Sam’s Town Casino in Las Vegas. The PPV show will be on Friday followed by a television taping on Saturday.

Tickets are currently on sale for both shows to Ringside Members, and go on sale to the public on Friday at 10 a.m.

ROH’s next major PPV is Final Battle 2015 from the 2300 Arena (former ECW Arena) in Philadelphia, PA, on December 18 — their version of WrestleMania. This year’s main event features Jay Lethal defending the ROH World Heavyweight Title against ROH and New Japan star AJ Styles. It will air live on traditional PPV at 9 PM ET/6 PT.