Killer Kross will take on Minoru Suzuki in his NJPW Strong debut.
The match has officially been announced for the Lonestar Shootout NJPW Strong taping on Friday, April 1 in Dallas.
A former WWE NXT Champion, Kross’s debut at Lonestar Shootout was announced on Tuesday in a promo video where he issued the challenge to Suzuki. The promotion made the match official on Wednesday.
Five matches are now official for the taping. In addition to being taped for Strong, Lonestar Shootout will be available for purchase as a standalone event on FITE TV.
Here is the lineup so far:
NJPW Strong Lonestar Shootout, Friday, April 1, 5 p.m. Central time —
US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. “Speedball” Mike Bailey
Killer Kross vs. Minoru Suzuki
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Chris Dickinson
Rocky Romero vs. Ren Narita
Juice Robinson, David Finlay, Daniel Garcia & Kevin Knight vs. Mascara Dorada, Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors & Yuya Uemura
Killer Kross is set to make his NJPW Strong debut at Lonestar Shootout on April 1, and has challenged Minoru Suzuki for the event.
Kross’s debut was announced on social media today with a video showing Kross declaring his arrival in NJPW by attacking unnamed trainees in a gym.
Kross explained that he earned his name with his accomplishments in and out of the ring, then said that his new beginning starts in Dallas. He called out Suzuki by name, and ended the video with his “tick tock” catchphrase.
A former two-time NXT Champion, Kross was released by WWE on November 4, 2021 following a brief stint on the Raw roster. He has since worked an MLW event and a handful of independent dates, but the NJPW show on April 1 will be his most high-profile bout since leaving WWE.
In addition to being taped for air on NJPW Strong, Lonestar Shootout will also be available as a standalone purchase on FITE TV.
The lineup so far:
NJPW Strong Lonestar Shootout, Friday, April 1, 5 p.m. Central time —
US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. “Speedball” Mike Bailey
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Chris Dickinson
Rocky Romero vs. Ren Narita
Juice Robinson, David Finlay, Daniel Garcia & Kevin Knight vs. Mascara Dorada, Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors & Yuya Uemura
Minoru Suzuki will face Blake Christian when he returns to the United States next month.
GCW announced today that Suzuki will face Christian at GCW’s Paranoid event on April 9, which takes place at the Ukrainian Cultural Center in Los Angeles.
Last month GCW announced that Suzuki would be coming in for five dates. Other matches Suzuki is scheduled to have in GCW include Chris Dickinson at Bloodsport 8 in Dallas on March 31, Effy on April 2 at Joey Janela’s Spring Break part 2 also in Dallas, Speedball Mike Bailey on April 10 in San Francisco, and Too Cold Scorpio on April 23 in Detroit.
Suzuki is also scheduled to be at the WrestleCon SuperShow on March 31, where he’s set to face Biff Busick, and NJPW’s Lonestar Shootout event on April 1, both in Dallas.
Other matches announced for Paranoid include Effy & Allie Katch vs. The Briscoes and AJ Gray vs. ‘Swerve’ Strickland.
GCW has booked a match between Minoru Suzuki and 2 Cold Scorpio.
The promotion announced on Friday that Suzuki and Scorpio will face off at GCW The Old Me on Saturday, April 23 from Detroit. The only other match announced for the show thus far features John Wayne Murdoch taking on Hoodfoot.
The Briscoes, Effy, Bandido, Nick Wayne, and Second Gear Crew are all advertised for the event as well.
*DETROIT UPDATE*
Just Signed:
***Legends Collide***
MINORU SUZUKI vs 2 COLD SCORPIO
Plus: JWM vs Hoodfoot Briscoes Effy Bandido Nick Wayne SGC +more!
Suzuki has several matches booked in the United States during WrestleMania week and throughout April. He’ll be making five appearances for GCW during that time and has matches against Chris Dickinson, Effy, “Speedball” Mike Bailey, and Scorpio set.
Suzuki vs. Dickinson is taking place at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport 8 on Thursday, March 31, while Suzuki vs. Effy is on the card for Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 part two at midnight on Saturday, April 2. Both of those shows are part of The Collective 2022 in Dallas during WrestleMania week.
Suzuki vs. Bailey is set for GCW Devil in a New Dress in San Francisco on Sunday, April 10.
GCW has yet to announce Suzuki’s opponent for their Paranoid show in Los Angeles on Saturday, April 9.
Minoru Suzuki and “Speedball” Mike Bailey are set to face off for the first time ever.
GCW has announced Suzuki vs. Bailey for their Devil in a New Dress show in San Francisco on Sunday, April 10. Suzuki has several matches and bookings upcoming in the United States beginning with WrestleMania week in Dallas.
Suzuki will face Chris Dickinson at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport 8 on March 31. That same week, Suzuki will wrestle Effy at Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 part two. Suzuki is also booked for GCW Paranoid on April 9 in Los Angeles.
GCW Presents Devil in a New Dress Sun 4/10 – 5PM PST The Midway – San Francisco pic.twitter.com/bUyCYUwKlp
— GameChangerWrestling (@GCWrestling_) March 4, 2022
Devil in a New Dress will be GCW’s San Francisco debut.
GCW also announced today that AJ Gray will defend his Extreme Championship against Sw3Rve The Realest (aka Shane Strickland). The match will take place at GCW Paranoid on April 9 in Los Angeles.
Sw3Rve The Realest will also be in action at Devil in a New Dress.
*LA UPDATE*
Just Signed:
AJ GRAY vs SW3RVE THE REALEST
Plus: Minoru Suzuki Bussy Second Gear Crew Chris Bey +more!
The bout will be Suzuki’s first for RevPro since 2019. Suzuki is a former Undisputed British Heavyweight Champion, having held the title for 105 days in 2018.
Ospreay has held the top RevPro title since defeating Zack Sabre Jr. for the belt in February 2020. He has since defended the title against Kyle Fletcher, Ricky Knight Jr., Doug Williams, Shota Umino, and Michael Oku.
2022 is shaping up to be a busy year for Suzuki, who will embark on a tour of the United States in March and April, including appearances at WrestleCon’s SuperShow, NJPW Lonestar Shootout, Joey Janela’s Spring Break, and Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport over WrestleMania weekend in Dallas, plus GCW shows in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Detroit, as well as NJPW’s Windy City Riot event in April.
A new match has been announced for GCW Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 Part 2.
Minoru Suzuki will take on Effy on the WrestleMania weekend event on Saturday, April 2. The event will begin at 12:01 a.m. Central time, so it’s essentially a Friday night show.
Janela made the match announcement today on Twitter.
Suzuki vs. Effy joins the previously announced Matt Cardona vs. Chris Dickinson bout on the Part 2 lineup.
For Part 1 on Thursday, March 31, Jon Moxley will defend the GCW World title against AJ Gray, Alex Colon defends the GCW Ultraviolent title against John Wayne Murdoch, plus Janela takes on X-Pac in a match stemming from this past weekend’s GCW Welcome to Heartbreak show, where Janela turned on X-Pac following a tag match where the two teamed against Cardona and Brian Myers.
The lineups:
GCW Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 Part 1, Thursday, March 31, 8 p.m. Central time —
GCW World Championship: Jon Moxley (c) vs. AJ Gray
GCW Ultraviolent Championship: Alex Colon (c) vs. John Wayne Murdoch
Joey Janela vs. X-Pac
GCW Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 Part 2, Saturday, April 2, 12:01 a.m. Central time —
Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson is official for GCW Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport 8.
At GCW’s Welcome to Heartbreak event on Friday night, Dickinson called on Barnett to give him another match against the man who defeated him at Bloodsport 7. Today, the match was made official.
It was asked for by @DirtyDickinson at the @GCWrestling_ show on Friday night and I told him and the audience, "Done deal."
Dickinson is returning to the ring in grand fashion as he rematches Minoru Suzuki.
This will be the third time Suzuki and Dickinson have faced each other in singles competition, with Suzuki winning the first two matches. Their first bout took place at NJPW Showdown from Philadelphia’s 2300 Arena on October 16th of last year. The second match took place six days later when they headlined Bloodsport 7 in Los Angeles.
Jon Moxley, John Hennigan, Timothy Thatcher, Janai Kai, Marina Shafir, Biff Busick, and JONAH have also been announced for the show. Suzuki vs. Dickinson is the only match announced thus far.
Bloodsport 8 will take place March 31st from Fair Park in Dallas, Texas and stream live on FITE TV.
NJPW star Minoru Suzuki is returning to Game Changer Wrestling for five events this spring.
GCW has announced that Suzuki will be in action at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport 8 on Thursday, March 31 and Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6, part two on Friday, April 1. Both of those shows are being held in Dallas, Texas as part of The Collective 2022 during WrestleMania week.
Suzuki is also set for three more GCW shows this April. Those dates are:
Saturday, April 9 — Los Angeles, California
Sunday, April 10 — San Francisco, California
Saturday, April 23 — Detroit, Michigan
*BREAKING*
MINORU SUZUKI returns to GCW for 5 big shows starting at The Collective in Dallas!
3/31: Dallas Josh Barnett's Bloodsport
4/1: Dallas Joey Janela's Spring Break 6
4/9: Los Angeles 4/10: San Francisco 4/23: Detroit
Before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Suzuki was supposed to face Orange Cassidy at Joey Janela’s Spring Break 4 in 2020. On Twitter, Joey Janela stated that Suzuki vs. Cassidy won’t be happening this year. Janela wrote: “Guys I know you want to see that match, I did too! It’s not happening & it has nothing to do with me, I don’t wanna get your hopes up! Stop bothering me about it! Anyways glad to finally have The legend Suzuki at Spring Break! LFG!”
Joey Janela’s Spring Break 6 is a two-part event. The first part is taking place on March 31.
Suzuki has also been announced for WrestleCon’s Mark Hitchcock Memorial SuperShow on March 31 and NJPW’s Lonestar Shootout event at WrestleCon on April 1. Plus, he’s set for NJPW’s Windy City Riot show in Villa Park, Illinois on Saturday, April 16.
Suzuki will face Biff Busick (formerly known as Oney Lorcan in WWE) at the Mark Hitchcock Memorial SuperShow.
WrestleCon made Suzuki vs. Busick the first official match announcement for the annual Mark Hitchcock Memorial SuperShow in Dallas at the Fairmont Hotel on Thursday, March 31.
The announcement came after Busick demanded a match with Suzuki earlier in the day.
Suzuki and Busick join Mike Bailey, The Briscoe Brothers, The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express, Bandido, Jonathan Gresham, and Atsushi Onita as the talent officially announced for the SuperShow.
Oney Lorcan during his WWE tenure, Busick was part of the November 2021 WWE mass releases that included 18 different talents being cut.
Suzuki was announced for a pair of NJPW shows in the United States in April, including the Lonestar Shooutout on Friday, April 1 in Dallas, plus Windy City Riot in the Chicago area on Saturday, April 16. He currently holds the NJPW provisional KOPW 2022 trophy, and is set to defend it against Toru Yano in a dog cage match on Sunday’s NJPW New Year’s Golden Series event.
The Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Famer and NJPW provisional KOPW 2022 has been announced for NJPW Lonestar Shootout on Friday, April 1 on WrestleMania weekend in Dallas, Texas, as well as NJPW Windy City Riot in the Chicago, Illinois area on Saturday, April 16.
Suzuki was last in the United States for a nearly two-month tour in September and October 2021 that saw him wrestle dates for AEW, Impact Wrestling, GCW, NJPW, and numerous indie promotions.
The Lonestar Shootout show will be split up into episodes of NJPW Strong to air on NJPW World, while the Windy City Riot event appears to be a standalone event similar to November’s Battle in the Valley show in San Jose, California.
Suzuki will defend the provisional KOPW 2022 trophy against Toru Yano in a dog cage match on Sunday’s NJPW New Year’s Golden Series event in Hokkaido.
Polls to decide the stipulation for the KOPW 2022 match at Sunday’s NJPW New Year’s Golden Series event closed today, and the winning choice is set.
Minoru Suzuki will defend the provisional KOPW 2022 trophy against Toru Yano in a dog cage match. The only way to win is to lock your opponent inside a dog cage.
Polls were conducted on the NJPW and NJPW Global Twitter accounts, with Yano’s choice of a dog cage match beating Suzuki’s proposal of a handcuffs deathmatch by a 60.5 to 39.5 percent margin in the NJPW 1972 poll, and a 50.5 to 49.5 percent margin in the NJPW Global poll.
In totality, 22,099 votes were cast in the two polls.
Suzuki won the provisional KOPW 2022 at Wrestle Kingdom 16 night two in January, defeating Yano, Chase Owens and CIMA in a four-way to crown the first provisional title holder.
Sunday’s show will wrap up the New Year’s Golden Series tour. Here is the lineup:
IWGP World Heavyweight Championship: Kazuchika Okada (c) vs. Tetsuya Naito
NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Championship: EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi & SHO (c) vs. Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & YOH
KOPW 2022 dog cage match: Minoru Suzuki (c) vs. Toru Yano
Suzuki will put his KOPW 2022 trophy on the line against Yano at NJPW’s New Year’s Golden Series tour show in Sapporo on Sunday, February 20. Suzuki has proposed a “Handcuff Deathmatch” as the stipulation for the match, while Yano has proposed a “Dog Cage Match.”
A fan vote will begin on Twitter tomorrow to determine the stipulation.
With Minoru Suzuki and Toru Yano set to face off for the KOPW 2022 trophy on February 20 in Sapporo, both competitors have now brought their choice of stipulations to be put to a fan vote beginning February 9.
After Yano handcuffed him to the ropes on several occasions in January, the current trophy holder Minoru Suzuki has proposed a Handcuff Deathmatch. In this bout, there will be no disqualifications, and both men will start with handcuffs on their wrists, allowing the possibility for them to be chained to anything- including one another.
In response, as demonstrated by Yano on TAKA Michinoku on Monday in Korakuen, Suzuki’s challenger has proposed a Dog Cage Match. In this bout, the only way to win will be to lock your opponent in the dog cage at ringside.
Which rules will be chosen? Voting begins at noon on February 9 on Twitter!
Suzuki defeated Yano, Chase Owens, and Cima in a four-way match at Wrestle Kingdom 16 night two last month to win the KOPW 2022 trophy. Yano ended 2021 as the official KOPW Champion for that year.
The February 20 New Year’s Golden Series show will air live on NJPW World. Here’s the full card:
IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Tetsuya Naito
NEVER Six-Man Tag Team Champions EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi & SHO defend against Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & YOH
KOPW 2022 Champion Minoru Suzuki defends against Toru Yano
This was the next installment of New Japan Showdown tapings from 2300 Arena f.k.a. the ECW Arena in Philadelphia.
Alex Coughlin Challenge Match Series: Jonathan Gresham defeated Alex Coughlin
New Japan’s “Challenge Match Series” is usually a pre-graduation routine, a series of matches where rookie Young Lions take on top talent. This happens right before they transition to a higher position on the card and get new tights and/or a gimmick. Alex Coughlin looks to be the next graduate from the LA Dojo, and his first match was against ROH’s Jonathan Gresham.
Gresham’s last appearances with NJPW were at the 2019 Super J-Cup tournament shows, pre-pandemic.
They shook hands before the bout. The two traded headlock takeovers. They got tied up in the corner, both tangled up in a collar-and-elbow, and neither wanted to be first to break. This led to some chippiness between the two. They bumped chests. Coughlin shoved Gresham, but the veteran Gresham quickly had rookie Coughlin back on the mat with another headlock takeover.
What’s so great about Gresham is how he injects life into fundamental chain wrestling. He’s never boring, yet he’s not reinventing the wheel in terms of creativity. He’s just that damn good. So much of this match was built on a headlock takeover, and it worked.
Coughlin hung right in there, too. He’s bigger than Gresham, but since Gresham wrestled the smarter, craftier style, thus neutralizing any size advantage Coughlin had. Coughlin escaped eventually and locked in a headscissors hold. When Gresham attempted to bridge out of the headscissors, was able to clasp his hands around Gresham’s waist and deadlift him onto his shoulder—from a seated position, mind you. He threw Gresham to the mat with a gutwrench suplex.
They traded lots of close nearfalls. After exchanging a number of sunset flips and inside cradles, Gresham caught Coughlin with a headscissors pin for the win. This was mid-sequence, too, meaning most of the audience didn’t see it coming. I sure didn’t. It was a nice spin on the headlock takeover-to-headscissors spot we’ve seen in pro wrestling ad nauseam over the years, plus it was a loss that doesn’t take anything away from Coughlin while also enhancing Gresham’s “best pure wrestler in the world” gimmick. This was excellent.
Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Ren Narita, Rocky Romero & the DKC defeated Team Filthy (Danny Limelight, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs & Tom Lawlor) via disqualification
The babyface team stormed the ring and went after Team Filthy before the bell even rang. Rosser’s head was shaved as a result of Lawlor shaving Rosser’s head after a match a few weeks ago, with Lawlor eating his hair. Filthy.
Rosser immediately began biting Lawlor while the rest of the match spilled out onto the floor. Rosser and Lawlor threw wild punches at each other, in and out of the corner. Rosser took off his shirt and choked Lawlor with it, then blew snot-rockets at him. Great energy from everyone here, but particularly Rosser, who was fired-the-hell up. JR Kratos put the kibosh on this after he ambushed Rosser, taking him out with a huge jumping lariat.
Lawlor pounced on top of the fallen Rosser and began strangling him. This is an especially great spot since we know Lawlor is a BJJ black belt and he’s choosing to strangle Rosser with two hands like an angry guy in a bar fight. The rest of Team Filthy came back into the ring and posed over Rosser until the rest of the babyfaces broke things up.
Team Filthy continued to work Rosser over. The West Coast Wrecking Crew and Danny Limelight used a 3-on-1 offense to keep Rosser down. They fed Rosser to Kratos who was waiting for Rosser on the floor. When Kratos went to deadlift suplex Rosser, “Mr. No Days Off ” slipped out and shoved Kratos into the ring post. WCWC came at him from the opposite side, but Rosser took both out with a double-lariat. Danny Limelight darted in, but Rosser launched him into the air, back body dropping him onto Kratos, who was still recovering on the floor. Rosser’s proverbial spirit bar was flashing at this point. He drilled Lawlor with a gutbuster on the floor, though I’m not sure who that would’ve hurt worse, him or Lawlor.
Ren Narita and Royce Isaacs were in together next. Narita scored a two-count with a beautiful single-arm suplex. Narita might have the best bridge in the business right now. Jorel Nelson broke up the pin. The DKC jumped in next and unleashed some kiai power onto Isaacs, chopping him up in the corner before whipping him to Narita for a release front suplex. DKC and Karl Fredericks showed off nice double-team work.
Isaacs, the legal man for Team Filthy, caught Fredericks with a pop-up kneelift, then tagged out to Limelight. Fredericks planted Limelight with a spinebuster after Limelight was doing the cha-cha. Romero tagged in next and he and Limelight then got into it.
Later, Lawlor and Rosser brawled again in the ring, doing their own rendition of the Frye-Takayama endless punches spot.
Limelight almost landed his patented double-jump swinging DDT, but Romero cut him off and turned it into a falcon arrow-to-armbar submission attempt. The match ended when a masked and hooded wrestler entered the ring and began hitting Romero with a black kendo stick.
The wrestler then removed his hoodie and was revealed to be the new Black Tiger, or as Alex Koslov called him on commentary, “the Black Tiger Mask.” Black Tiger laid Romero out with a tombstone piledriver. He appears to be aligned with Team Filthy.
Tiger, Lawlor and Kratos beat on Rosser in the ring. The crowd chanted “F*CK YOU KRATOS,” then “SHUT THE F*CK UP” at Tom Lawlor when he got on the mic.
“I’m sick and damn tired of Rocky Romero gettin’ his ass off SoundCloud and into the ring! I’m so sick of hearing about how far Darren has come in the past few years!” Lawlor went on to explain that the new Black Tiger hadn’t come back to haunt him, but to end him. He’d then put his foot across Rosser’s neck. The crowd started chanting “FRED,” a retort to Lawlor’s “Darrren (Young)” comment earlier.
In the post-match promo backstage, Lawlor explained that he believed Rocky Romero had been with NJPW for 20 years and was abusing his power. He accused Romero of trying to “hold everybody down” and that he was sick of it. He said Team Filthy deserves all of the top spots in Japan. Lawlor called out “Darren” (Fred Rosser) for threatening to come to his house and beat him up. He said Rosser wasn’t man enough to ever do something like that.
By the end of this promo, it felt like it turned into an old-school Survivor Series team interview, with most of Team Filthy eyeballing the camera while Lawlor cut his promo on Rosser.
After a break, we saw NJPW Young Lion Gabriel Kidd make his post-pandemic return. Kidd was previously based out of Japan and had a number of awesome matches with Yota Tsuji, Ren Narita and Yuya Uemura (among others) over the past few years.
Kidd got on the mic and said he would be at New Japan’s Detonation show in Riverside, CA. He said that he saw fellow Young Lion Alex Coughlin’s match with Jonathan Gresham earlier in the night and that he liked it very much. He called Gresham out to the ring next and implied he wanted a match with him in Riverside at Detonation.
Gresham came to the ring. Before handing him the mic, Kidd explained how much respect he had for Gresham and what he’d done for wrestling, but that if he thought he could ever out-wrestle a British wrestler, he’d be mistaken.
Gresham explained that he didn’t even know who Kidd was, but that it wasn’t a knock, it was just that Gresham hadn’t been paying attention to NJPW recently. He said that he was impressed with Kidd’s training partner, Alex Coughlin, and that he was sure Kidd was at least as good or better than Coughlin, and that he’d gladly accept his challenge for a match in California. The two would shake hands and Gresham would then exit the ring.
Before the segment ended, Kidd grabbed the mic once more and told the crowd that if they were going through hard times these days to not give up, to keep steppin’ and to speak up, because no one is alone.
Daniel Garcia & Violence Unlimited (Brody King & Chris Dickinson) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso)
This was a fun but relatively short match that the crowd loved. Dickinson and Brown mixed it up first. Brown went toe-to-toe with Dickinson, but the bigger “Dirty Daddy” stamped him out with a hard shoulder block before he tagged young phenom Daniel Garcia in for some double-team offense. Brody King and Misterioso got into it later. The crowd loved King.
Garcia systematically tore through the Stray Dog Army. He, King, and Dickinson locked all three Stray Dogs in simultaneous submission holds.
Bateman used a Northern Lights bomb variation on King to lay him out. Dickinson and Garcia were able to save King from the Stray Dog 3-on-1 attack. King would then power bomb Barrett Brown onto the rest of the wrestlers on the floor, Mike Awesome-style. Violence Unlimited and Garcia put the Stray Dog Army away with tandem piledrivers (plus one Gonzo Bomb from King, the legal man).
Philadelphia Street Fight: Suzuki-gun (Lance Archer & Minoru Suzuki) defeat Eddie Kingston & Jon Moxley
This was taped before Jon Moxley’s hiatus.
Before the match, they aired a production package made up of mostly past AEW footage of the four wrestlers going at it on a past episode of Dynamite.
Archer came out first and took out a few Young Lions standing ringside. Vintage Archer. The crowd went wild for “Kaze Ni Nare” as usual.
Retired NJPW referee Tiger Hattori joined Matt Rehwoldt and Alex Koslov on commentary
When Moxley and Kingston were in the ring with Suzuki-gun before the bell, Suzuki and Mox began poking and shoving each other.
Suzuki knocked Kingston out cold with a forearm shot. Suzuki terrorized with a kendo stick. Hattori said on commentary that Suzuki has a lot of experience doing kendo.
The fight spilled to the backstage area, and then the backlot. I got deja vu as all four brawled into the parking lot area, which ECW fans have seen a number of times over the years in famous promos and matches. Archer did the 1996 Kevin Nash–Rey Mysterio lawn-dart-into-side-of-truck spot to Mox. Suzuki choked Moxley with the top part of a folding chair.
Something may have happened inside the arena at this point in the match. People started booing just as Eddie Kingston threw a cinderblock at Archer but missed. Rehwoldt mentioned the inside feed may have cut out. Not entirely sure what was happening inside the venue, but the match quickly moved back inside the arena.
Suzuki brought a traffic cone into the venue, hitting Kingston over the head with it. Then, he whacked Kingston a couple times with a kendo stick and bowed, then respectfully placed the stick near the announcers table.
Archer strangled Kingston with a dustpan. He and Suzuki beat on Kingston inside the ring, this time with kendo sticks. Suzuki wound up and swung like a baseball player, then placed the stick under Kingston’s arm for an armbar with the extra kendo stick leverage.
Mox reappeared and came with an unhinged door in hand. The crowd started chanting “E-C-W!” though I can’t recall a time when someone in ECW ever used a door. Mox grabbed someone’s sign because someone had written “MOX USE MY SIGN!” on it. He ripped off the paper and revealed the object to be a stop sign. I wonder how the fan got a hold of that.
Moxley slid the door into the ring and would eventually dropkick Archer through it as it was set up against the turnbuckle. The crowd chanted “this is awesome.”
Archer would later level Kingston with a full nelson slam, but Kingston powered up and landed two urakens and a DDT for two—Suzuki made a last minute save. He put Kingston in a guillotine choke. Suzuki went for the Gotch-Style piledriver but Mox broke it up. Finally, Suzuki-gun put the match away after Archer pinned Kingston with a Blackout onto a garbage can.
Afterwards, Archer grabbed a mic and ordered a cameraman onto the apron. He then told Kingston that he was sick of Kingston screwing him out of matches and titles. He said this was for disrespecting Suzuki-gun. He’d then talk about his then-upcoming match with Kingston as part of AEW’s World Title Eliminator tournament. Suzuki threw the mic at Kingston and said “We are Suzuki-gun!” before leaving ringside.
Kingston grabbed the mic and said something too, but it was garbled because NJPW bleeped a word and you couldn’t hear the end of what he said because it was so short. So, Eddie Kingston said something. And it was probably vulgar, as you’d expect.
Final thoughts:
This was a top-tier edition of NJPW Strong. The opener between Coughlin and Gresham was an excellent opener; the tag matches in between had tons of fire and the Rosser vs. Lawlor angle for the Openweight title has been arguably the best long-term angle in the show’s short history; the main event was a hell of a main event brawl with more grit and grime than the AEW version.
From quality to action to star power, this show had a bit of everything for everyone, especially if you like your wrestling to be a little more rough-and-tumble than the usual.
Four matches have been announced this week’s NJPW Strong. The episode will be the finale of the New Japan Showdown series of episodes.
In the main event, Jon Moxley and Eddie Kingston will face Minoru Suzuki and Lance Archer in a street fight.
In the semi-main, Brody King, Chris Dickinson and Daniel Garcia will take on Barrett Brown, Bateman and Misterioso in a trios bout.
Also set for this week’s episode, Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson and Danny Limelight will face Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita and The DKC in a ten-man tag.
In the opener, Jonathan Gresham will take on Alex Coughlin.
The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.
Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing.
Here is Saturday’s full lineup:
NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night four, Saturday, November 27, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–
Philadelphia street fight: Jon Moxley & Eddie Kingston vs. Minoru Suzuki & Lance Archer
Brody King, Chris Dickinson & Daniel Garcia vs. Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso
Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson & Danny Limelight vs. Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita & The DKC