NJPW Strong results: Bullet Club vs. Team Ishii

Tonight saw the first episode from NJPW Strong’s Collision tapings in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Killer Kross defeated Yuya Uemura via TKO

It should be noted that the English commentary track for this match was heavily distorted and pretty much unlistenable throughout. It sounded like the broadcast team’s track was out of sync which created a bizarre echo on the commentary track, like the live audio was out of phase with whatever post-production commentary track they used.

Uemura was fearless as he went at Kross at the start of the match. He was able to wrestle him to the mat and maintain some control upfront. Uemura went into open guard with his back to the mat as Kross stood over him trying to get his hands on the wily newcomer. Kross threatened a closed-fist punch but then thought against it and invited Uemura back to his feet to fight.

Uemura slapped Kross in the corner. Kross responded with a release German suplex, planting him on the mat. Uemura later landed a nice dropkick, then put Kross in an armbar. He later earned a two-count for a bridging German suplex of his own.

When Kross put his hand around Uemura’s throat, Uemura grabbed Kross’ wrist and wrenched it down. He again locked in an armbar and transitioned to a triangle choke. Kross used a Rampage Bomb to free himself from Uemura’s hold. The crowd started chanting for Uemura. Kross decked him with a lariat and went for a cover. Kross was nonchalant as he pinned Uemura, so Uemura was able to kick out. Kross then power bombed Uemura, then lifted him into a fireman’s carry and back suplexed him. The crowd chanted “YU-YA!” over and over.

The finish saw Kross catch Uemura in the back of the head with a running elbow, The Quickening, which knocked Ueumura out. Kross pounced on Uemura and continued landing elbows to the back of Uemura’s head until the referee stepped in to stop the match; Kross is your winner via technical knockout.

Karl Fredericks defeated QT Marshall (w/ The Factory)

The commentary track audio issues in the first match seemed to be resolved for this match.

Fredericks blasted Marshall with a John Woo dropkick right before the bell, knocking Marshall into the corner. Fredericks has been having issues with The Factory ever since he denied Marshall’s invitation into the group, so tonight he was fired up. Marshall escaped to the floor but Fredericks chased after him. They went back and forth, both in and out of the ring. Fredericks dove through the ropes onto Marshall, but then, behind referee Jeremy Marcus’ back, Factory member Nick Comoroto laid Fredericks out. When Marcus noticed Fredericks had been laid out, he went to the floor and ejected both Comoroto and Aaron Solow from ringside.

At one point, Marshall did a handspring enzuigiri kick that seemed to shock the crowd. Fredericks later came back and landed a high jumping elbow drop and later a spinebuster on Marshall. When Fredericks went for a cross body-block, Marshall caught him in mid-air, then put him down with a backbreaker-flatliner combination. The crowd’s reaction? A “YOU STILL SUCK!” chant.

Marshall called for the Diamond Cutter, but Fredericks avoided it. Marshall used a pop-up punch and a Liger Bomb on Fredericks for two.

When the ten-minute call sounded, it was Fredericks who came out victorious, putting Marshall away with the Manifest Destiny DDT for the win.

Afterwards, Marshall offered a handshake, but before Fredericks could do anything, The Factory went after Fredericks, attacking him until someone in a black hood made the save, taking out The Factory and sticking a double-jump moonsault on Solow before revealing himself to be Christopher Daniels. The crowd was shocked and chanted “HOLY SH*T!’ Daniels had a singles match with Fredericks on an episode of Strong this year and told Fredericks that he’d earned Daniels’ respect and would watch his back. The two shook hands and celebrated before heading to the back.

Bullet Club (Jay White, Juice Robinson, Hikuleo, Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows) defeated Team Ishii (Tomohiro Ishii, Rocky Romero, Mascara Dorada, Chuck Taylor & Ren Narita)

Dorada and Anderson kicked things off. Anderson caught Dorada with a couple hard shots, but Dorada was back in the game quickly, planting Anderson face-first into the mat with an inverted slingblade before walking up the ropes and taking Anderson out with a springboard dropkick.

Ishii and Gallows were in together next. The size disparity between these two made for a great visual. Ishii went for a suplex but Gallows reversed it, then tagged in Juice Robinson, who’d just won the IWGP US title the night before. He and Narita had a good exchange before Robinson tagged Jay White in, with White continuing to work over Narita. Hikuleo tagged in next and blasted Narita with a loud chop. Gallows tagged in and dropped an elbow. They essentially trapped Narita in the blue corner, but he kept fighting back regardless of the abuse. He caught White in a rear naked choke and got his hooks in between White’s thighs, his whole body clinging to White. White quickly crashed himself and Narita into the corner, with Narita getting the worst of it. Robinson came in next, but Narita was able to escape and tagged out to a fresh Chuck Taylor. He did a somersault senton over the top rope and onto the floor, taking out both Robinson and Anderson.

Rocky Romero appeared late in the match, at one point using a ton of Forever Clotheslines in each corner to various prone members of Bullet Club, but it quickly turned into a 5-on-1 situation when BC cleared the ring and went after Romero.

We saw fast action in the last few minutes of the match. A bit later, Ishii was able to block Anderson & Gallows giving him the Magic Killer, then was able to take the much larger Doc Gallows down with a brainbuster. Hikuleo appeared and blasted Ishii with a big boot. Dorada reappeared and caught Hikuleo out with a springboard dropkick. Dorada again climbed the ropes—he does this without using his hands, by the way—and did a flipping senton to the floor, crash-landing onto four members of Bullet Club.

Back in the ring, Romero cradled Hikuleo for a close two-count. Hikuleo then caught Romero coming off the ropes and put him down with a big snap powerslam, then put him away after massive chokeslam. Bullet Club are your winners.

Bullet Club went after Romero after the match. Ishii and Narita tried making the save, but there were too many BC bodies in the ring for them to handle. Dorada came in later too, but met the same fate. The fisticuffs continued while the timekeeper kept ringing the bell. White laid Ishii out with a Bladerunner before rolling him out of the ring. Bullet Club celebrated their win and Robinson’s IWGP US Championship from the previous night before heading to the back.

Final thoughts:

This was a good show with an enthusiastic crowd. The main event was a full-on buildup to NJPW’s Dominion card in Osaka, Japan, which has IWGP World Heavyweight champion and CHAOS member Kazuchika Okada taking on Jay White in the main event. 

NJPW Strong results: United Empire six-man tag match

Ren Narita and Chris Dickinson went to a time limit draw (15:00)

The crowd chanted “Welcome back!” at Dickinson, who was returning to the ring after an injury at Battle in the Valley in November last year.

Narita and Dickinson grappled in the center of the ring early on. Dickinson went for a double wrist lock but Narita countered and applied one of his own. Dickinson made it to the ropes for a break. They’d trade hard slaps later. Dickinson hit a suplex with a float-over lateral press for two. He used a front suplex on Narita next.

This was a slower paced match. The two would eventually end up trading holds on the mat again, Dickinson mostly with the advantage, holding Narita in top position.

Narita unloaded a flurry of kicks. Dickinson responded with hard chops in the blue corner. He used a shoulder lock on Narita until Narita grabbed the ropes for a break.

From here, Narita would maintain the advantage on offense for a bit. He tied Dickinson into a figure-four leglock until Dickinson broke the hold when he made it to the ropes. Narita continued laying in hard front kicks into Dickinson’s chest. Dickinson then threw hard chops of his own. He took Narita down with a go-behind ankle pick, then slammed Narita back down with a German suplex. The ring announcer made a “two minutes left” call while both were flat on the mat. Once the ring announcer made that call, I got the feeling combined with the overall slower pace of this match that we were getting a draw.

Dickinson drilled Narita with a vertical drop brainbuster for two. He locked in an STF, but Narita made it to the ropes. Narita countered with a sleeper into a cobra twist, but Dickinson hip-tossed him off. Thirty seconds left. Dickinson threw a few hard kicks. Narita caught one. 15 seconds left. Narita locked Dickinson in the cobra twist again, but the time limit was up: Narita and Dickinson wrestled to a time limit draw.

LA Dojo (Clark Connors and Karl Fredericks) with Yuya Uemura defeated The Factory (Aaron Solow and Nick Comoroto) with QT Marshall

Fans booed the hell out of the Factory. QT Marshall kept interfering. Solo used a quick rollup on Fredericks early. Connors and Comoroto jaw-jacked at each other next. Comoroto tried rag-dolling Connors, but Connors was able to take the larger man down with a shoulder block. Comoroto responded, slamming Connors in the center of the ring before working him over in the corner. QT Marshall would sporadically interfere and help work Connors over. Comoroto used a slingshot elbow on Connors, launching himself over the top rope and into the ring before pressing Connors over his head a few times. Connors broke things up and was eventually able to make it to the red corner to tag Fredericks back in. He landed a Stinger splash on Solo in the corner. Marshall laid out Fredericks while he was on the floor behind the ref’s back. The Factory scored a close two before Connors broke up the pin.

Connors and Solo traded elbows before Connors laid Solo out with a snap powerslam. Marshall stood on the apron and started shouting, but Yuya Uemura appeared and dragged him from the apron to the floor. The crowd enjoyed that. Fredericks reappeared and landed with a plancha from the ring. Connors in the ring used a spear and a spinning blue thunder bomb on Solow for the win.

Afterwards, QT Marshall got on the mic. The crowd chanted “shut the f*ck up.” On the broadcast, Marshall’s dialogue was almost inaudible because the crowd was so loud in drowning Marshall out. The crowd started chanting “asshole” at him. Marshall challenged Fredericks to a singles match at NJPW’s Philadelphia show. Fredericks grabbed the mic and asked the crowd if they wanted to see him beat Marshall’s ass in Philly. The crowd obliged.

United Empire (Great O-Khan, Aaron Henare & TJP) defeated Brody King, Taylor Rust & Mascara Dorada

O-Khan was pretty popular with the Hollywood crowd. Dorada was as well and got a nice response when they announced his name before the match got underway.

Taylor Rust and Aaaron Henare were in first. This was Henare’s NJPW Strong debut. Rust caught Henare with a high dropkick before Dorada and TJP were tagged in. They had a fast exchange, trading chops and headscissors. TJP raked at Dorada’s mask, trying to rip it off. The crowd did not approve.

The other four in the match started brawling at ringside while Dorada and TJP kept it going inside the ring. O-Khan came off the apron with a double ax-handle before back in the ring. He tagged in and sat on Dorada’s head while he was in the corner, shoving his ass into the back of Dorada’s head as he posed with his arms crossed.

TJP continued working over Dorada, dropping a knee at one point. He kept ripping at Dorada’s mask. Dorada was able to walk the ropes and take TJP out with a no-hands springboard dropkick before tagging out to King, who went wild on United Empire. King and O-Khan got into it next. They’re roughly the same size, which made for a good visual. King took out both O-Khan and Henare with a double lariat.

O-Khan locked the Claw onto King before Dorada appeared to break it up. Rust tried locking TJP in an ankle lock, but Henare broke it up, so Rust locked Henare in a modified Rings of Saturn-type stretch. TJP broke that up. Henare landed a spinning sit-out sidewalk slam on Rust, setting Rust up for TJP’s Mamba Splash off the top rope, but only got two before Dorada broke the pin.

When Mascara Dorada went for a dive to the floor, he accidentally crashed into his partner, King. TJP followed up with a dive of his own onto Dorada. In the ring, O-Khan and Henare did a double-team fireman’s carry-swinging neckbreaker type maneuver that didn’t look so hot, pinning Rust to win the match.

United Empire continued going after their opponents after the match. TJP finally ripped Mascara Dorada’s mask off, sending the crowd into a boo-frenzy. This also happened to mask the weak in-ring finish just moments earlier. TJP celebrated with Dorada’s mask in the ring as staff rushed Dorada backstage.

After this, Great O-Khan got on the mic and cut a promo in Japanese:

“That does for the Japanese peasants watching STRONG as well. Now you understand! This is Great O-Khan. Aaron Henare. TJP . . .”

The crowd chanted “shut the f*ck up!” at the group.

“Get it? The power of the United Empire!” The three posed in the ring before heading to the back.

Final thoughts:

This was a standard quality episode of NJPW Strong, with the draw at the top of the show being the most entertaining of the the three matches on tonight’s show.

The Factory angle is almost completely out of juice, and it sounds more like the crowd is booing the creative as opposed to booing the Factory themselves. The final bout was good, but what surprised me most was how over Great O-Khan was. It’s the pancake story that people love, isn’t it?

NJPW reveals cards for New Beginning USA tour

NJPW has revealed the cards for their New Beginning USA tour, which starts later this month.

The tour will kick off on January 24 in Tampa, Florida. The show will be headlined by Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kota Ibushi, Juice Robinson, David Finlay & Rocky Romero vs. Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa, Yujiro Takahashi, Chase Owens & Jado in an elimination match.

Other notable bouts for Tampa include YOSHI-HASHI vs. Lance Archer and Jeff Cobb vs. Alex Zayne.

YOSHI-HASHI will be in another singles match on January 26 in Nashville, Tennessee when he faces Karl Fredericks. Satoshi Kojima vs. Cobb, Yuji Nagata vs. Lance Archer, and Tanahashi vs. Yujiro Takahashi are also set, and Ibushi, Robinson, Finlay & Romero vs. Tonga, Loa, Owens & Jado will be the main event.

Tanahashi, Ibushi, Robinson, Finlay & YOSHI-HASHI will team against Tonga, Loa, Yujiro Takahashi, Owens & Jado on January 27 in Durham, North Carolina. That show will also have TJP vs. Misterioso, Cobb vs. Fredericks, and Ren Narita vs. Archer.

January 30 in Miami will be headlined by Tanahashi & Ibushi vs. Tonga & Loa. Cobb will face Narita in a singles match, Zayne will take on Archer, and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express will face Colt Cabana & Toru Yano.

The final show of the tour will take place on February 1 in Atlanta, Georgia. That card will have an IWGP Tag Team title match featuring new champions Robinson & Finlay defending against former champions Tonga & Loa. Ibushi will face Owens in a singles match, Cobb will face Archer, and Tanahashi & The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express will team against TJP, Zayne & Clark Connors.

Full cards for the tour are available below:

Tampa (January 24) —

  • Elimination match: Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kota Ibushi, Juice Robinson, David Finlay & Rocky Romero vs. Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa, Yujiro Takahashi, Chase Owens & Jado
  • YOSHI-HASHI vs. Lance Archer
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Alex Zayne
  • TJP & Karl Fredericks vs. Colt Cabana & Toru Yano
  • Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata vs. Ren Narita & Alex Coughlin
  • Clark Connors vs. Misterioso

Nashville (January 26) —

  • Kota Ibushi, Juice Robinson, David Finlay & Rocky Romero vs. Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa, Chase Owens & Jado
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yujiro Takahashi
  • Yuji Nagata vs. Lance Archer
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Jeff Cobb
  • TJP & Clark Connors vs. Colt Cabana & Toru Yano
  • YOSHI-HASHI vs. Karl Fredericks
  • Ren Narita & Alex Coughlin vs. Alex Zayne & Misterioso

Durham (January 27) —

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kota Ibushi, Juice Robinson, David Finlay & YOSHI-HASHI vs. Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa, Yujiro Takahashi, Chase Owens & Jado
  • Ren Narita vs. Lance Archer
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Karl Fredericks
  • The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express & Alex Zayne vs. Colt Cabana, Toru Yano & Rocky Romero
  • Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata vs. Clark Connors & Alex Coughlin
  • TJP vs. Misterioso

Miami (January 30) —

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi & Kota Ibushi vs. Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa
  • Juice Robinson, David Finlay & Rocky Romero vs. Yujiro Takahashi, Chase Owens & Jado
  • Alex Zayne vs. Lance Archer
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Ren Narita
  • The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express vs. Colt Cabana & Toru Yano
  • Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata vs. Karl Fredericks & Alex Coughlin
  • YOSHI-HASHI & Misterioso vs. TJP & Clark Connors

Atlanta (February 1) —

  • IWGP Tag Team Champions Juice Robinson & David Finlay defending against Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Chase Owens
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Lance Archer
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi & The Rock ‘n’ Roll Express vs. TJP, Alex Zayne & Clark Connors
  • Colt Cabana & Toru Yano vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Jado
  • YOSHI-HASHI & Rocky Romero vs. Alex Coughlin & Misterioso
  • Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata vs. Karl Fredericks & Ren Narita