WOR: Dennis Condrey passes away, Smackdown, weekend news

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the death of the great Dennis Condrey, New Japan Cup and CMLL news, NXT injuries, Josh Alexander’s knee, another big change to the ratings, MMA and NCAA notes, the Smackdown report and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: Dennis Condrey passes away
19:06: Callum Newman wins NJPW Cup, CMLL notes
26:20: Josh Alexander, NXT injury updates
28:44: Nielsen updating methods yet again, ratings notes
42:20: Nate Diaz update, NCAA notes, Logan Paul & Tom Brady flag football
56:17: WWE SmackDown recap

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WOL: Remembering ‘Loverboy’ Dennis Condrey, why Randy Orton can’t get booed

It’s Saturday’s Wrestling Observer Live with Jim Valley.

This week, we remember one of the founding and longest tenured members of the legendary Midnight Express as “Loverboy” Dennis Condrey passed away Friday night at the age of 74.

We’ll talk about his career and the GoFundMe set up by Dax Harwood for funeral expenses.

On WWE SmackDown Friday night, Randy Orton tried to get booed but couldn’t. What does that mean for WrestleMania?

Plus, new champs in CMLL, WWE and The New Japan Cup and more. Check it out.

Right Click Save As (sub needed)

WOR: AEW Revolution business notes, WWE WrestleMania 42 news

Dave Meltzer and Garrett Gonzales are back on Wrestling Observer Radio discussing the major stories from today’s issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

We talked about:

  • Injury updates for Toni Storm and Josh Alexander
  • AEW Revolution business
  • AEW Dynamite ratings
  • WrestleMania news and thoughts on Oba Femi
  • New Japan Cup

Click here to listen (subscription required) or watch on YouTube

NJPW reveals full New Japan Cup finals card, Takeshita title defense set

With the finals now set, NJPW has revealed the full card for the last night of New Japan Cup 2026.

The tournament will conclude in Niigata on Saturday with Callum Newman and Yuya Uemura facing off in the finals. In addition to being crowned the New Japan Cup winner, the victor earns an IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot against Yota Tsuji at Sakura Genesis on April 4.

It was already known that Konosuke Takeshita would be in action on Saturday. NJPW has now confirmed that he’ll be defending his NJPW World Television Championship against a mystery opponent. It’s the first title defense for Takeshita since he defeated El Phantasmo last month to become champion.

“The NJPW World TV title will be on the line when Konosuke Takeshita makes his first defense,” NJPW wrote. “After winning the title in overtime at New Beginning USA in Trenton New Jersey, who will step up to the plate and face the Alpha?”

Saturday’s event is being held in Niigata and will air live on New Japan World starting at 2 a.m. Eastern time. Here is the complete lineup:

New Japan Cup 2026 finals (Saturday, March 21) —

  • Tournament final: Callum Newman vs. Yuya Uemura
  • Yota Tsuji, OSKAR, Yuto-Ice & Daiki Nagai vs. Zack Sabre Jr., Ryohei Oiwa, Kosei Fujita & Hartley Jackson
  • Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano & Aaron Wolf vs. Ren Narita, Don Fale & Dick Togo
  • Shingo Takagi, Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori vs. Jake Lee, Francesco Akira & Jakob Austin Young
  • Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. HENARE & Great-O-Khan
  • YOH, Master Wato & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. DOUKI, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Tatsuya Matsumoto vs. Taichi, Satoshi Kojima & El Desperado
  • NJPW World Television Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against mystery opponent
  • Masatora Yasuda vs. Taisei Nakahara

New Japan Cup 2026 finals set

Either Callum Newman or Yuya Uemura will be crowned the winner of New Japan Cup 2026.

The New Japan Cup finals are now set with Newman vs. Uemura scheduled to take place this Saturday (March 21). They each booked their place in the match with semifinal victories today. In the main event, Newman defeated Shota Umino to advance. Uemura had already defeated Oleg Boltin in the semi-main.

A confrontation between Newman and Uemura then took place at the end of today’s card.

“Your dreams finish tomorrow. I finished your best friend’s off tonight. You ain’t making it past me,” Newman told Uemura. “Do what you will Yuya, I’m going to f***ing murder you.”

Uemura responded by saying that he will not let Newman prevail in the tournament. No matter what heel tactics Newman tries to use, Uemura promised to stand tall.

An IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot is at stake with the Newman vs. Uemura winner going on to challenge Yota Tsuji for the title at Sakura Genesis on April 4. If it ends up being Tsuji vs. Newman, that would continue the rivalry between Tsuji’s Unbound Company faction and Newman’s United Empire. A Tsuji vs. Uemura match would pit two of NJPW’s most important building blocks for the present and future against each other.

Will Ospreay — who had a tense interaction with his former protege Newman back in January — was watching today’s show and reacted to Newman advancing to the New Japan Cup finals.

For both Newman and Uemura, this would be their first time ever winning the New Japan Cup. The finals are airing live on New Japan World on Saturday with a start time of 2 a.m. Eastern.

NJPW announces full lineup for New Japan Cup semifinals

The full card has been announced for the New Japan Cup semifinals on Friday, March 20.

The penultimate night of the tournament will take place in Nagaoka. In addition to the two tournament matches, several multi-person tag team bouts have also been announced.

The full lineup for the show is below.

New Japan Cup 2026 lineup for Friday, March 20:

  • New Japan Cup semifinal: Callum Newman vs. Shota Umino
  • New Japan Cup semifinal: Boltin Oleg vs. Yuya Uemura
  • Yota Tsuji, Yuto-Ice, OSKAR, and Gedo vs. TMDK (Zack Sabre Jr., Ryohei Oiwa, Hartley Jackson, and Kosei Fujita)
  • Aaron Wolf, Toru Yano, and Tomoaki Honma vs. House of Torture (Ren Narita, Done Fale, and Dick Togo)
  • Shingo Takagi, Drilla Moloney, Taiji Ishimori, and Daiki Nagai vs. United Empire (Jake Lee, HENARE, Francesco Akira, and Jakob Austin Young)
  • YOH, El Desperado, and Master Wato vs. House of Torture (DOUKI, SHO, and Yoshinobu Kanemaru)
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI, and Tatsuya Matsumoto vs. Taichi, Satoshi Kojima, and Masatora Yasuda
  • Taisei Nakahara and Ryusuke Taguchi vs. House of Torture (Chase Owens and Yujiro Takahashi)

New Japan Cup 2026 semifinals set

New Japan Cup 2026 is down to its final four competitors.

The semifinals are now fully set after the completion of Tuesday’s event in Fukushima. Shota Umino and Callum Newman earned their spots in the next round of the tournament, joining Yuya Uemura and Oleg Boltin. Both semifinal matches will take place this Friday.

Umino pinned Zack Sabre Jr. to advance to the semifinals, while Newman used a low blow to help advance over Hirooki Goto. Uemura and Boltin had already secured their semifinal spots with respective victories over Shingo Takagi and Ren Narita.

Of the four semifinalists, none have ever won the New Japan Cup before.

The final two nights are happening this Friday and Saturday with both shows being held at Aore Nagaoka in Niigata. An IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot is at stake. The winner challenges Yota Tsuji for the belt in the main event of Sakura Genesis on April 4.

New Japan Cup 2026 schedule —

Semifinals:

Friday, March 20

  • Shota Umino vs. Callum Newman
  • Yuya Uemura vs. Oleg Boltin

Finals:

Saturday, March 21

  • TBD

New Japan Cup 2026 night 8 live results: Quarterfinals begin

The New Japan Cup quarterfinals kick off on Sunday in Yamanashi, with the first two quarterfinal matches taking place on the show.

In the semi-main event, Yuya Uemura will face Shingo Takagi. The main event will see Boltin Oleg take on House of Torture’s Ren Narita.

Uemura comes into this match after defeating Great-O-Khan in the first round and Drilla Moloney in the second round. Takagi enters the match after defeating Don Fale in the second round.

Boltin Oleg comes into this quarterfinal match after defeating HENARE in the second round and El Phantasmo in the first round. Narita advanced with a second-round victory over Satoshi Kojima and a first-round win against Taichi.

The winners of today’s matches will meet in the semifinals on Friday, March 20 in Niigata. The quarterfinals continue Tuesday in Fukushima with Hirooki Goto vs. Callum Newman and two-time tournament winner Zack Sabre Jr. facing Shota Umino.

Our live coverage kicks off at 1 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.

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

Main Card

TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Kosei Fujita) defeated YOSHI-HASHI & Taisei Nakahara

Fujita bullied Nakahara into the corner to allow Jackson a brainbuster onto the Young Lion. He’d later vertically suplex YOSHI-HASHI. Nakahara gained revenge on Fujita with a back body drop. Fujita swiftly recovered from a Boston Crab, which Nakahara immediately tapped out of.

Post-match: Jackson punctured the wind out of Nakahara with a senton.

I don’t know whether this was intentional or not, but this was a hilarious match. The cruel focus on Nakahara, the fact that he folded fast, and Jackson’s unnecessary senton. Plus, YOSHI-HASHI seemed to just walk off without much care toward the Young Lion. Screw that Young Lion in particular.

House of Torture (Don Fale, Yoshinobu Kanemaru, Yujiro Takahashi, & Chase Owens) defeated Aaron Wolf, Toru Yano, Satoshi Kojima, & Masatora Yasuda

Kojima rescued Yano following the prompt HoT ambush, chopping crateres into the bosoms of Owens and Takahashi. Fale took umbridge with this, as he overcame the veteran, soon pressing his full weight on his seasoned prey. A Koji-Cuttter swung a comeback for Kojima’s team, with Wolf capitalizing via an Elbow Drop to Owens. Yasuda continued the momentum with dropkicks to Kanemaru. Kanemaru returned a dropkick to Yasuda’s knees as his co-horts charged their opponents on the ropes. Yasuda tapped rather quickly thanks to Kanemaru’s figure-four leglock.

That’s two matches in a row where a Young Lion tapped out mere seconds after a submission move was employed. They’re getting creative in the booking meetings.

United Empire (Jake Lee, HENARE, Great-O-Khan, Jakob Austin Young, & Francesco Akira) defeated Unbound Co. (Yota Tsuji, Yuto-Ice, OSKAR, Drilla Moloney, & Gedo)

OSKAR finally took his retribution for the night prior when he got his hands on Akira. Ice and HENARE brawled into the crowd. Khan tethered Gedo to the corner, where he and Young tormented Unbound Co.’s residential diminutive wrestler. Tsuji prevented Lee’s black glove usage and singlehandedly dismantled the United Empire. Moloney hurled Akira around the ring, leading the Italian to escape to the ringside. There, OSKAR intimidated him back onto the cerulean mat.

Ice and HENARE met in a meaty slobberknocker that featured Khan denying a Bomboclat to the New Zealander. Young repeatedly attempted his Brainrot signature, but a Gedo Clutch overwrote it. Thanks to Akira, Young landed Brainrot to finish off Gedo.

Post-match: Ice and HENARE once more brawled in the crowd. Lee and Tsuji convinced them both to stop their fighting. Moloney took Lee’s stuffed monkey, leading to a full brawl between both factions.

Decently average. Nothing groundbreaking or story-advancing.

United Empire (Callum Newman & Zane Jay) defeated Hirooki Goto & Tatsuya Matsumoto

When Goto appeared to have wrenched control of the match, Jay tripped him up. Matsumoto and Goto stomped a mudhole through him as recompense for this crime. Jay planted Matsumoto into the mat, pummeling him, as he bickered with the referee and the Yamanashi crowd. Goto whipped Newman into the corner, where the incensed former IWGP World Heavyweight Champion employed a Reverse-GTR and a lariat.

Matsumoto repaid Jay’s ejection of Goto from the ring with a running uppercut. Newman obliterated Matsumoto with a roundhouse kick, followed through with a penalty kick, and vanquished him with a vertical suplex for the pinfall.

Newman’s ascension in NJPW has been gripping to witness. Fans had been saying he was a lite variation of Will Ospreay, and we’ve seen him come into his own as a colder, more calculating leader of United Empire. This man is 23 years old and, despite his incredible upside, hasn’t reached his peak yet. I see Jay coming soon, not too far behind. Goto was also in great form.

TMDK (Zack Sabre Jr & Ryohei Oiwa) defeated Shota Uminio & Tomoaki Honma

Like a song, Umino and Sabre’s early lock-up increased in intensity before dying down to the chord of the former’s dropkick. Sabre locked Honma’s head between his legs following an unwise Kokeshi. Honma surprised everyone in the Aimesse Yamanashi arena when he secured an octopus stretch to Sabre. Much to the blonde Brit’s frustration, Umino held mighty control over a well-placed cravat. Umino beckoned Honma for a united Kokeshi to Sabre and Oiwa, respectively. Honma followed through with another to Oiwa’s carcass. It took one moment for Oiwa to recover from The Grip, which put Honma away for the 3-count. Following the pin, Oiwa embraced his fallen opponent.

Post-match: Outside, Sabre angrily assaulted Umino, tossing him into the barricade before frightened front-row fans and left Oiwa in the ring.

Nothing short of a rollercoaster. All four men put on their working boots and had me hooked. Sabre can be a real dick, and this match was quite the example of it. Oddly enough, despite building an engaging path to their upcoming match, Sabre and Umino’s improved chemistry barely fell short of the enjoyable back-and-forth that was Honma and Oiwa.

New Japan Cup Quarterfinals

Oleg Boltin defeated Ren Narita

Boltin’s entrance hadn’t even reached its halfway point when Narita subdued him. Targeting Boltin’s knee, Narita stopped at nothing to wound the Kazakh wrestler’s limb. He slammed it into the ringpost, dropped elbows on it, and stretched it to an agonizing degree; still, Boltin did not relinquish the match. Boltin lifted Narita’s Guillotine Choke, teetering him across the ring. Although he faltered on his weak knee, Boltin charged Narita, dizzied him with his signature Boltin Shake, and concluded with a Boltin Bomb.

Narita aspired for a Double Cross, instead countering a Kamikaze into a triangle choke. Boltin redirected that into a powerbomb, so he landed a successful Kamikaze. House of Torture’s Yoshinobu Kanemaru and Don Fale predictably interfered, attacking the referee and stomping Boltin’s corpse. Narita sent them a wooden table. Boltin delivered a Kamikaze to Narita and Kanemaru both, but Fale denounced Boltin’s hopeful triumph. Toru Yano and Aaron Wolf descended upon the House of Torture, evicting them from the match. Narita took advantage of the chaos with more knee targeting. Boltin replied with a German Suplex. Boltin kicked out of a Double Cross at the last second to the surprise of everyone. Foolishly, Narita leapt from the top rope into Boltin’s finishing Verdict and Kamikaze, thus giving the worn wrestler the victory.

If you’ve followed my recap history of NJPW, you’ll likely know how big a fan I am of Boltin. I’m beaming like an idiot typing this. To even see him make it to the quarterfinals is cathartic. I hope this year is great for Boltin. His selling of the left knee remained consistent, and Narita’s heelish exploitations reverberated so fluently. Even the comeuppance for House of Torture remained as satisfying as ever.

Yuya Uemura defeated Shingo Takagi

Takagi had no issue dominating Uemura early on, with a shoulder tackle and senton giving way to a lariat over the top rope. Uemura grew bitter and impatient, flinging Takagi consecutively into the blue steel guardrail and bending the left arm into the barricade. Draining the life out of Takagi, Uemura held a sleeper hold tightly until the Rampaging Dragon found the strength to hurl him over his shoulder. Takagi fully earned a comeback with a Sliding Bomber and a powerbomb.

Uemura returned with a Knife-Edge Takedown, wrenching Takagi’s arm behind his back. Though exhausted, Uemura and Takagi bartered suplexes as though haggling with the mere limits of their bodies’ capabilities. Takagi pulled out his normally reliable Made in Japan, but it wasn’t enough. Uemura found enough temerity to persevere, albeit momentarily, and suffered a Pumping Bomber and Burning Dragon. Uemura left Takagi fighting unconscious sleep by way of a triangle choke. Takagi’s face contorted as a result of this and a vicious Deadbolt. Sensing Uemura perched on the top rope, Takagi used his own weariness as a tool, stumbling into the rope and knocking the Firestorm’s nether region into the bar, which held the turnbuckle pad in place. Uemura transitioned a failed High-Fly Flow into an armbar-into-wristlock. It took a bit of struggle, but Uemura denied lariats, using Takagi’s arms for one last Deadbolt to advance to the semifinals.

The drama in this was palpable, so much so that I felt I was one with the silent crowd, which erupted into rapture. This is the tight rope NJPW, at its best, can walk so well. That realism in storytelling and presentation that burns away kayfabe to, for a moment, feel as tangible as the aspirational fight anyone and everyone can partake in just to succeed in life. Hope. That’s what this match was. Technically speaking, Uemura and Takagi sold their asses off, and Takagi looked to have the match in several places. It’s fitting that Uemura used Hiroshi Tanahashi’s High-Fly Flow, because this was as close as I’ve felt to The Ace since his retirement.

Final Thoughts

I can’t help but chuckle at how the show just plowed through the first two matches, with immediate tapouts. A match or two had little to offer, with United Empire and Unbound Co.’s bout feeling like a formality, aside from OSKAR’s pure hatred of Francesco Akira.

As mentioned earlier, Callum Newman has seen quite a growth. If he plays his cards right, he can be one of the biggest players in the company. Turning the United Empire into something similar to the Bullet Club may take time to reach that faction’s status of importance. Shota Umino’s own image rehabilitation has also improved, with the Wrestle Kingdom 19 main event seeming like a distant memory in his relation to Zack Sabre Jr.

On this particular show, however, Oleg Boltin’s victory over Ren Narita was my personal favorite of the night. Seeing him and Yuya Uemura overcome their opponents tonight has restored a bit of faith. That said, we have yet to see how the semifinals turn out, and thus, the finals. The New Japan Cup in 2026 has more developments in store, and I hope it can steer the company into the good graces of fans.

New Japan Cup 2026 quarterfinals set

The 2026 New Japan Cup is down to its final eight wrestlers.

The tournament continued today with a show in Aichi at Nagoya Kinjo Pier Arena. The final two second-round matches took place on the show.

In the main event, Zack Sabre Jr. defeated his TMDK teammate Ryohei Oiwa with a Sabre Driver in a match that went just under 30 minutes.

Our own Corey Michaels wrote of the bout, “What a main event. It’d be easy to mistake this contest as the finals, given the effort these two put in. The mental games these two played while harkening to their strengths, it’s peak storytelling without the need for words.

In the semi-main event, Shota Umino booked his ticket to the quarterfinals by defeating Yujiro Takahashi. Umino needed to fend off interference from Takahashi’s House of Torture stablemates, but ultimately picked up the win with the Second Chapter.

Sabre and Umino will now meet in the quarterfinals on Tuesday.

The updated schedule for the tournament is below.

Quarterfinals — 

Sunday, March 15:

  • Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi
  • Oleg Boltin vs. Ren Narita

Tuesday, March 17:

  • Hirooki Goto vs. Callum Newman
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Shota Umino

Semifinals —

Friday, March 20:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Finals —

Saturday, March 21:

  • TBD

New Japan Cup 2026 night 7 live results: ZSJ vs. Ryohei Oiwa

The New Japan Cup continues with a show in Aichi on Saturday.

Two second-round matches are scheduled for the event. Two-time tournament winner Zack Sabre Jr. will face Ryohei Oiwa in the main event, while Shota Umino takes on Yujiro Takahashi in the other tournament bout. The winners of the two matches will meet each other in the quarterfinals on Tuesday, March 17, in Fukushima.

ZSJ is a two-time tournament winner, having won in 2018 and 2022. He was eliminated by David Finlay in the semifinals of last year’s cup.

Saturday’s card is the final event before the tournament moves into the quarterfinal round on Sunday with Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi and Oleg Boltin vs. Ren Narita. Hirooki Goto vs. Callum Newman is then scheduled for Tuesday after both men advanced out of the second round on Friday’s show.

Our live coverage begins at 4:30 A.M Eastern Standard Time.

**********

Main Card

United Empire (Great-O-Khan, HENARE, Franceso Akira, & Jakob Austin Young) defeated Unbound Co. (Yuto-Ice, OSKAR, Drilla Moloney, & Daiki Nagai)

Ice started the night with a heated exchange with HENARE, resulting in the latter thwarting a Bomboclat with a shoulder tackle. Meanwhile, OSKAR and Akira tussled on the entrance ramp. Moloney reunited with former War Dog Akira, with the Italian using OSKAR’s short temper to blind the referee. This led to Akira stomping Moloney’s midsection. Nagai’s spry energy proved hard for Akira to handle, but the United Empire member vanquished him with his Fireball Knees.

Post-match: Ice and HENARE brawled while OSKAR chased Akira out of the arena and back.

Nagai is on fire, and Akira was a great foil for that—they would have a great time in the Best of the Super Juniors against each other.

House of Torture (Don Fale, Yoshinobu Kanemaru, & Chase Owens) defeated Aaron Wolf, Satoshi Kojima, & Masatora Yasuda

Once the dust had settled in the typical House of Torture ambush, Wolf gained control over Fale with an elbow drop. Owens snuck in some cheap shots, so that Fale could tenderize his prey. Kanemaru further excruciated the former judoka in the corner, pressing his legs into Wolf’s shoulder. Owens capitalized by stretching the Olympic athlete’s neck. Kanemaru sought to pick up where Owens left off, but suffered a Scoop and a Slam for his troubles.

Now unleashed, Kojima’s machine gun chops left a crater in Owens’s chest. Koji-Cutter foiled Owens’s aspired comeback, allowing Yasuda to collaborate with Wolf, the former landing a dropkick. Yasuda met a nearfall after a Last Testament. Owens rubbed salt in the wound with a C-Trigger and Last Testament to defeat the Young Lion.

On the bright side, at least it wasn’t a visual pinfall over Wolf’s body. I’m nearly soured on my hopes of Wolf’s booking in this company. I’ll give it another month. However, I don’t want it to be lost that Yasuda has so much upside; it’s ridiculous. He’s definitely among my favorites in this crop of Young Lions.

Shingo Takagi & Yota Tsuji defeated Yuya Uemura & Tomoaki Honma

Uemura started spectacularly, slowing Takagi in a headlock and dazing him in an armdrag. Tsuji declared war on Honma’s midsection and chest with his boot and chops, leaving the veteran writhing on the mat. Uemura observed Takagi, catching him mid-lariat, yet didn’t anticipate a Sidewalk Slam to counter him. Takagi built up enough steam to send Uemura flat with a shoulder tackle.

In a bit of comic relief, Tsuji kept rolling out of a few of Honma’s Kokeshi attempts. The seasoned wrestler inevitably fell upon his head as Tsuji evaded another Koskeshi at the last second. Eventually, Honma landed the move directly on Tsuji’s shoulder. Uemura lent some aid, but Takagi cut him off with a Pumping Bomber. Tsuji ended Honma with a Gene Blaster.

Oh, this was so much fun. I had a dumb grin just seeing these two teams go at it. Uemura and Takagi are going to have a barn-burner on tomorrow’s March 15 Cup show. Honma’s Kokeshi attempts brought levity to the intensity. Nothing too complicated, just simple graps.

United Empire (Callum Newman, Jake Lee, & Zane Jay) defeated Bishamon (Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI) & Tatsuya Matsumoto

Lee grimaced as Bishamon and Matsumoto struck him with Beats of the Revolution after Newman baited Goto with a faux-lock-up spot. Jay subdued YOSHI-HASHI with a torrent of elbows. Matsumoto and Jay set forth a flurry of fists, but it was a dropkick from the former that birthed a comeback. Victory was nearly on the horizon, as Matsumoto fleetingly held a Boston Crab on Jay’s carcass. Lee broke it up and paid dearly, with YOSHI-HASHI coming to the rescue. Matsumoto stared at the lights once Lee’s Facebreak Shot saw the latter pinning him with one palm of his hand.

I enjoyed Newman versus Goto at 2025’s Wrestling Dontaku, and this was a savory primer to tomorrow’s rematch. Matsumoto and Jay were entertaining in their back-and-forth.

Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated House of Torture (Ren Narita & Dick Togo)

Boltin singlehandedly triumphed over an early House of Torture dominance with a Scoop and a Slam to Narita. Yano argued with Referee Marty Asami about his typical turnbuckle pad routine; meanwhile, Togo removed one of those pads. Yano would be subjected to the turnbuckle’s exposed steel repeatedly, in addition to stomps on his left leg. Boltin swung a comeback with his Boltin Shake that disoriented Narita long enough for a Boltin Bomb.

Narita saved himself with a quick kneebar. Yano finally managed to strip bare a turnbuckle pad, and he teamed with Asami against a ruthless Togo. Fortunately for Yano, he stole the win with a roll-up while Togo bickered with Asami.

I totally pictured House of Torture escaping with the pinfall over Yano, or at least a Boltin victory. Maybe a sea of HoT members is interfering. Instead, I got a chuckle out of Yano outsmarting Togo. Narita and Boltin contrast each other quite nicely, so I’m anticipating their next singles match.

New Japan Cup

Shota Umino defeated Yujiro Takahashi

Takahashi soon took off his shirt after many headlocks opened this contest. He employed a single-leg Boston Crab. Firmly in control of the pace, Takahashi’s luck ran out the moment Umino pulled out a Fisherman’s Suplex. Umino ensnared Takahashi via STF, narrowly ending in a rope break. Dick Togo and Yoshinobu Kanemaru came to Takahashi’s side, but he begged them to leave. Both competitors were left to volley elbows to one another’s jaw.

Although Umino picked up speed for a lariat, Takahashi pulled one of his own out in the nick of time to save his control of the match, much to the hype of the Aichi crowd. Umino screamed in defiance, launching himself in a Shining Wizard for a nearfall. Takahashi resorted to a low blow. House of Torture flocked to the ring and gifted Takahashi his shirt back. Umino refused every pinfall, even when the group choked him and clobbered him. He even denied Takahashi’s cane, rebounding with a lariat. Umino left the match with the pinfall courtesy of his Second Chapter, advancing to the quarterfinal.

The story of Takahashi and Umino’s past played an emotional role in this match. Thankfully, I knew better than to get invested. Kanemaru did something similar not too long ago with Taichi. Shame, though, the match was legitimately good until that point. The wrestling narrative equivalent of “it was all a dream” in most storytelling tropes.

Zack Sabre Jr defeated Ryohei Oiwa

Oiwa proved too mighty to kneel to Sabre’s technical stylings in the early goings. Eventually, Sabre secured a headlock. Oiwa’s strength outmatched Sabre’s strategy, his familiarity leading every evasion of armbars and headscissors. Locking in a cravat, Oiwa planted Sabre to the mat. A Penalty Kick echoed from Oiwa’s chest, reverberating through the Nagoya Kinjo Pier Arena.

In the corner, Sabre kicked at his comrade-turned-opponent. A few too many times, he returned to the well with more kicks. Oiwa toppled him with a lariat. He caught Sabre’s leg and targeted his knee. Oiwa retaliated with a dropkick as Sabre clutched desperately at his knee. He carved a space to breathe after a cross armbreaker. Another dropkick by Oiwa swung the match back in his favor. Tying his legs around Oiwa’s shoulders, Sabre cut off Oiwa’s circulation and stole his leg to stall an inevitable rope break.

Oiwa flipped Sabre like a pancake via his patented The Grip. One Doctor Bomb later, and Oiwa caught Sabre in an Ankle Lock. He maneuvered it behind Sabre’s back, applying such pressure to force Sabre to a rope break. Oiwa pulled deep within himself to kick out of a Zack Driver to the shock of the Aichi crowd. Catching a Penalty Kick, Oiwa glanced reproachfully at Sabre, who concussed him a moment later with another, more successful one. Grip after Grip, Oiwa’s aspirations were denied until finally, one sent Sabre to the cerulean mat. Sabre redirected Oiwa’s Grip into a Zack Driver to put away his comrade once and for all.

What a main event. It’d be easy to mistake this contest as the finals, given the effort these two put in. The mental games these two played while harkening to their strengths, it’s peak storytelling without the need for words. To that effort, though, I need to commend Walker Stewart for his exceptional commentary. For a match just to qualify for a quarterfinal, this match was art. How can you surpass someone you care about, who knows you as much as you know yourself?

Final Thoughts

Not a bad night whatsoever. Sure, the House of Torture got another win in a match featuring Aaron Wolf, but we must expect this of booking right now. Moving on, however, Yota Tsuji and Shingo Takagi versus Yuya Uemura and Tomoaki Honma was my favorite of the undercard.

In terms of the New Japan Cup matches themselves, ZSJ and Oiwa stole the show entirely. Expert craftsmanship from men who knew their craft and their distinctive techniques, respectively. I can’t put over enough how great that match was. Had it not been for the House of Torture shenanigans, Yujiro Takahashi and Shota Umino would have reached that same level. Sadly, I must again stress that we must expect that type of booking in NJPW.

I’m looking forward to what comes of the quarterfinals.

Another quarterfinal matchup set for New Japan Cup 2026

Hirooki Goto and Callum Newman are headed to the New Japan Cup 2026 quarterfinals.

The tournament continued on Friday with Goto and Newman winning their second-round matches. With respective wins over Jake Lee and Hartley Jackson, they’ve advanced to face each other in the next round. The Goto vs. Newman match will take place on March 17.

Goto, a mainstay of the NJPW roster, is looking to win his fourth New Japan Cup. He previously won the tournament in 2009, 2010, and 2012.

Newman has never won the tournament before. As one of the top young foreign wrestlers in the promotion, he’s become the leader of NJPW’s United Empire faction.

The quarterfinals are now almost fully set with Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi, Oleg Boltin vs. Ren Narita, and Goto vs. Newman confirmed. We’ll find out the last remaining matchup this Saturday when Yujiro Takahashi takes on Shota Umino and Zack Sabre Jr. battles Ryohei Oiwa in the second round.

New Japan Cup 2026 runs through March 21, with the winner receiving an IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot against Yota Tsuji at Sakura Genesis on April 4. Here is the updated schedule for the remainder of the tournament:

Second round

Saturday, March 14:

  • Yujiro Takahashi vs. Shota Umino
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ryohei Oiwa

Quarterfinals —

Sunday, March 15:

  • Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi
  • Oleg Boltin vs. Ren Narita

Tuesday, March 17:

  • Hirooki Goto vs. Callum Newman
  • TBD

Semifinals

Friday, March 20:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Finals —

Saturday, March 21:

  • TBD

Two more names advance to New Japan Cup 2026 quarterfinals

New Japan Cup 2026 continued to progress through the second round with two more tournament matches taking place on Thursday.

With respective victories over HENARE and Satoshi Kojima, Oleg Boltin and Ren Narita secured their spots in the quarterfinals. They will face off against each other next with Boltin vs. Narita taking place on March 15.

Boltin and Narita have now each picked up two victories in the tournament. Boltin has defeated El Phantasmo and HENARE, while Narita defeated Taichi in the first round before this win over Kojima. The 55-year-old Kojima initially wasn’t part of the New Japan Cup field but replaced the injured Tomohiro Ishii at the last minute and had a first-round bye.

There are still a few more second-round matchups left before the quarterfinals begin. Those will go down this Friday and Saturday before the quarterfinals kick off on Sunday with Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi and Boltin vs. Narita.

An IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot is at stake with the New Japan Cup winner earning the right to challenge Yota Tsuji at Sakura Genesis on April 4.

Here is the updated tournament schedule:

Second round

Friday, March 13:

  • Callum Newman vs. Hartley Jackson
  • Jake Lee vs. Hirooki Goto

Saturday, March 14:

  • Yujiro Takahashi vs. Shota Umino
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ryohei Oiwa

Quarterfinals —

Sunday, March 15:

  • Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi
  • Oleg Boltin vs. Ren Narita

Tuesday, March 17:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Semifinals

Friday, March 20:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Finals —

Saturday, March 21:

  • TBD

First New Japan Cup 2026 quarterfinal matchup set

The second round of New Japan Cup 2026 began on Tuesday with Yuya Uemura and Shingo Takagi booking their spots in the quarterfinals.

Uemura and Takagi advanced with respective victories over Drilla Moloney and Don Fale. The first quarterfinal matchup of the tournament is now set, with Uemura and Takagi scheduled to face off against each other on March 15. The winner of that then advances to the March 20 semifinals.

So far in the tournament, Uemura has notched victories over Great-O-Khan and Moloney. Takagi’s win against Fale was his first of the tournament due to receiving a first-round bye.

New Japan Cup 2026 runs through March 21. An IWGP Heavyweight Championship opportunity is at stake with the winner earning a title shot against Yota Tsuji in the main event of Sakura Genesis on April 4.

Here is the updated schedule for the remainder of the tournament:

Second round

Thursday, March 12:

  • Ren Narita vs. Satoshi Kojima
  • Oleg Boltin vs. HENARE

Friday, March 13:

  • Callum Newman vs. Hartley Jackson
  • Jake Lee vs. Hirooki Goto

Saturday, March 14:

  • Yujiro Takahashi vs. Shota Umino
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ryohei Oiwa

Quarterfinals —

Sunday March 15:

  • Yuya Uemura vs. Shingo Takagi
  • TBD

Tuesday, March 17:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Semifinals

Friday, March 20:

  • TBD
  • TBD

Finals —

Saturday, March 21:

  • TBD

WOR: RAW live, WrestleMania build, Vengeance Day, White House UFC

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including tons of notes on the new AEW streaming service, Double or Nothing ticket sales, Orton vs. Cody and the WrestleMania build, Vengeance Day recap, New Japan Cup and CMLL notes, tons of MMA news including the UFC White House card, the RAW report for the show Bryan attended live, and more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: MyAEW streaming service to launch outside US & Canada, Double or Nothing early tickets sales
13:19: WWE Wrestlemania 42 plans keep changing, NXT Vengeance Day recap
28:45: NJPW Cup update, CMLL notes
35:38: Ratings notes, boxing & MMA notes on ESPN/MVPW, UFC White House card reactions
56:01: WWE Raw recap

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Final two wrestlers advance to New Japan Cup second round

The New Japan Cup continued today with a show from Amagasaki, Hyogo.

The final two matches in the first round of the tournament took place, with Shota Umino and Ryohei Oiwa picking up victories.

Umino defeated Chase Owens in the semi-main event of the show. He had to fight off several members of House of Torture before picking up the win with Second Chapter. Umino now advances to face Yujiro Takahashi in the second round on March 14. Takahashi was one of the House of Torture members who interfered in today’s match.

Oiwa defeated Yuto-Ice in the main event of the show, picking up the victory with a cross-legged roll-up he has named the Roy Clutch. With the win, Oiwa now advances to face Zack Sabre Jr. in the second round on March 14.

Tuesday, March 10, Okayama City

  • Yuya Uemura vs. Drilla Moloney
  • Shingo Takagi vs. Bad Luck Fale

Thursday, March 12, Kagawa

  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Ren Narita
  • Boltin Oleg vs. HENARE

Friday, March 13, Osaka

  • Hirooki Goto vs. Jake Lee
  • Hartley Jackson vs. Callum Newman

Saturday, March 14, Aichi

  • Yujiro Takahashi vs. Shota Umino
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ryohei Oiwa

Sunday, March 15, Yamanashi

  • Quarterfinal matches begin