NJPW Strong results: KUSHIDA & Ren Narita vs. The WorkHorsemen

NJPW Strong’s High Alert tapings from Charlotte, North Carolina continued tonight with KUSHIDA making his debut for the show in the main event.

LA Dojo (The DKC & Kevin Knight) defeated The Heatseekers (Matt Sigmon & Elliot Russell)

The Heatseekers are four-time NWA Tag Team champions and have wrestled on Japanese indies like Jimmy Suzuki’s Tokyo Championship Wrestling, but not on a New Japan card until tonight.

Sigmon and Knight started things off for their teams. This was one of Knight’s first non-West Coast appearances with NJPW Strong. Ian Riccaboni did a good job putting over Knight’s vertical leap on commentary. If you weren’t already aware: Kevin Knight can jump. He connected with a standing frog splash on Sigmon for two.

Knight launched himself over the ropes onto the Heatseakers with a pescado before throwing Russell back into the ring. Russell would take control shortly after, knocking Knight off his feet with a big shoulderblock.

The Heatseekers maintained control of Knight as the five-minute call sounded. They generally kept Knight in the red corner, too far away from the DKC for Knight to make a tag. Russell knocked Knight over with a big boot before throwing a flurry of forearms to Knight while he was on the ground. Sigmon tagged in and earned a two-count on Knight with a German suplex.

Knight was able to evade Sigmon in the corner, then connected with a high dropkick on Russell, which gave Knight enough time to roll to the blue corner and finally tag out to a fresh DKC.

The DKC did a cool flying Liu Kang kick from the top rope, then went into his series of knife-edged chops called DK FIRE. Heatseekers came back, with Russell laying the DKC out with an Oklahoma Stampede. When Sigmon pinned DKC, Knight took the DKC’s foot and placed it on the bottom rope so that the ref would break the count.

The finish saw Sigmon roll the DKC up with a cradle, but while the ref was distracted arguing with Eliot Russell, Knight jumped into the ring and rolled Sigmon’s cradle hold over. When the ref made it back for the count, the DKC was able to hold Sigmon down for three. The LA Dojo team are your winners. Russell complained to NJPW’s ringside commentary team afterwards.

QT Marshall defeated Parker Li

QT Marshall came out next. Fans gave him the “What?!” treatment. Marshall said he was the person responsible for “opening the Forbidden Door” between AEW and NJPW. I think he expected more heat from that, but people were more excited to just drown him out and not listen. He’d then challenge a new wrestler named Parker Li, a smiley guy with a headband and the state of Oregon tattooed on his chest.

The crowd broke out into a “Let’s go Parker!/Q-T sucks!” chant. Li connected with a nice dropkick, but missed on the second when Marshall parried. Marshall then turned Li inside out with a lariat before dropping a few elbows onto him. The crowd bit more and more on Marshall’s baiting, and it did help get the crowd behind Li, especially on the nearfalls.

Li caught Marshall with a pop-up missile dropkick. When he went for a springboard attack, Marshall caught him mid-air with a right hand, then pinned Li after spiking him with a Diamond Cutter for the win. Parker Li was impressive here.

Marshall got on the mic again and said Li sucked. He said he was warmed up now. I think Marshall now holds the record for most speaking time ever on NJPW Strong next to the announcers.

So, who answered QT Marshall’s challenge? It was Shota Umino, who was not scheduled for the show. Marshall taunted Umino, then called for a referee and said he’d wrestle him now. A referee arrived, and Umino took off his jacket and told Marshall he was ready to go. Marshall called him a bitch and teased a match happening right then and there, but as soon as Umino stepped into the ring, Marshall stepped out of it and exited to the back. It’s safe to say we can expect some sort of showdown between Marshall and Umino by the end of the year.

TJP defeated Mascara Dorada

This was good. The two got into it early with fast back-and-forth action from the beginning. This angle has been going on for a while now, between TJP and Dorada, and on commentary they mentioned how TJP had stolen Dorada’s mask at a NJPW Strong taping and brought it to Japan with him for the recent Best of the Super Juniors tournament.

TJP started face-washing Dorada in the corner. The crowd booed TJP when he’d try ripping Dorada’s mask off. He’d later catch Dorada springboarding off the ropes and put him in a cross-armbreaker. Dorada got his foot on the ropes for a break.

Dorada later spiked TJP with a bulldog before a suicide dive through the ropes to the floor. Back in the ring, he did a rope-walk swanton, crashing onto TJP but only earning a two-count.

When TJP caught Dorada with a DDT, both were out for about a minute or so. The crowd heated up a little. They traded superkicks. Dorada lifted TJP into a fireman’s carry but TJP wisely grabbed the ropes to block any attempt at offense. TJP would then take Dorada and suplex him gut-first onto the ropes as TJP dropped to the floor. TJP would then go to the top and take the draped Dorada out with a Mamba Splash near the side of the ring.

Back in the ring, TJP missed on another Mamba Splash, but he landed on his feet. Dorada then hoisted TJP back into a fireman’s carry and drilled for two. Dorada then went to the top rope for a moonsault, and he missed, but also landed on his feet. TJP blocked and onto Dorada’s foot, but Dorada reversed that and locked TJP into a cool looking single-leg figure-four submission.

The crowd started chanting “Tap!” at TJP, who’d writhe in pain for a bit before snatching Dorada’s mask off. This forced referee Jeremy Marcus to help protect Dorada’s face and break the submission hold, by default. The crowd erupted in boos. TJP pretended like it was an accident, then smirked, climbed to the top rope and came back down onto Dorada with a Mamba Splash to pick up the win.

KUSHIDA & Ren Narita defeated The Workhorsemen (JD Drake & Anthony Henry)

This was a solid main event. Henry looked good in the ring early on with both Narita & KUSHIDA. Drake tagged in next and he KUSHIDA had a good exchange, with Drake getting the better of it in the end, taking KUSHIDA down to the mat with a hard lariat.

Narita tagged in and later earned a two-count on Henry after a bridging single-arm suplex. The Workhorsemen later took the lead and spent a good amount of time isolating Narita and working him over near their corner. They each blasted him with PKs to the back.

Narita was able to power up and put Henry down with a brainbuster before tagging out to KUSHIDA. He and Narita would work together, with KUSHIDA setting up Narita for an overhead front suplex to Henry. Narita tried the same on the larger Drake, who shut that down. Henry did an airplane spin TKO and Drake followed up with a shining wizard. Henry came off the top with a diving double foot stomp next, and Drake followed that up with a moonsault off the second rope onto Narita.

KUSHIDA was almost able to bodyslam Drake but he couldn’t pull it all the way off. It was enough to neutralize Drake, though, and KUSHIDA then was able to put Henry away with a bridging hammerlock suplex for the win.

Final thoughts:

The junior heavyweight & tag team matches are what’s worth checking out on this week’s episode of NJPW Strong.

Next week sees the final week of High Alert tapings that will feature Eddie Kingston vs. Jake Something and NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser taking on Fred Yehi. 

NJPW Strong results: Bullet Club vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi, Fred Rosser & Kevin Knight

The final set of matches from NJPW Strong’s Ignition tapings in Hollywood, California, aired Saturday.

Jeff Cobb defeated Jordan Clearwater

Clearwater returned to NJPW Strong after a few months away from the show. He has modified his look a bit, coming back in even better shape than he was before. Clearwater, sporting a new haircut and tan, wore a Nature Boy-esque robe to the ring.

Before things got underway, Clearwater did a slow, heelish disrobing before giving the crowd a few hip swivels. Cobb was not amused and went after the Karl Anderson trainee, but Clearwater looked to have expected an ambush and decked Cobb with a right hand.

They fought on the floor for a few moments. Back in the ring, Cobb was able to ragdoll Clearwater around the ring a bit — impressive because Clearwater is approximately the same size as Kazuchika Okada. He’s not a small fry.

After laying Clearwater out with a vertical suplex, Cobb went for a standing moonsault but missed. Clearwater connected with a running neckbreaker, but missed on his Midas Touch finish. Cobb answered with a back suplex.

Minutes later, we saw a similar version of the sequence described above with Clearwater missing on the Midas Touch and Cobb taking advantage, putting him down with a swinging back suplex before putting Clearwater away for good after a Tour of the Islands. This was also nice because we got to hear announcer Ian Riccaboni once again be able to say “‘Aloha’ means goodbye!’” It’s been a while.

Fred Yehi defeated Bateman

This was a good, solid match that was as tough as it was logical. Both very much understand how to be themselves in the ring in that they already seem to know what works and what doesn’t. It makes for an organic flow to a match, natural, but not forced.

There was a point in this when Yehi unloaded a flurry of jumping knee drops onto Bateman in the corner, and the crowd applauded at the intensity of the knee drops alone.

Compared with other bouts at the Ignition tapings, this featured less action, but the crowd still sounded invested. The wider differences in style help the program feel fresh.

Yehi knocked Bateman silly with a uraken and then won the match via TKO after dropping a series of elbows while holding Bateman in a koji clutch. This was a good match. Let’s get Yehi with the Blackpool Combat Club.

Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship Tournament Semifinal: Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso) to advance

Misterioso stuck the quebrada in the ring early in this match. Earlier on the tapings, he crashed shin-first into the guardrail and it looked nasty. He toughed it out, though, and looked unshaken here.

Misterioso went for a double-jump moonsault, but Fletcher caught him with a superkick in mid-air on the way down.

Later, Davis of Aussie Open slammed Brown on the floor. Brown later connected with a suicide dive onto the floor, and Misterioso followed up with a tope con giro.

Aussie Open looked so damn good throughout this. They’ve looked fantastic in all of their NJPW outings, really. It’s amazing how they move for their sizes; they’re most definitely heavyweights but they move at the same pace as any current high-impact junior heavyweight does.

They won the match with their Coriolis finish: a double-pumphandle suplex bomb, pinning Brown to put Stray Dog Army away to advance to the finals in North Carolina against TMDK.

Bullet Club (Jay White, Hikuleo & Chase Owens) defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi, Fred Rosser & Kevin Knight

Yuya Uemura was originally supposed to team with Tanahashi for this, but when Karl Fredericks was pulled from the NJPW Strong tag tournament, Uemura became his replacement and this turned into a special six-man match.

This was the first time ever that both the IWGP World Champion and STRONG Openweight champion have stood in the same ring together.

Tanahashi and White had a pose-off for the fans before things got underway. The two got the loudest reactions of the night. White teased squaring off with Tanahashi first, but he quickly tagged out to Chase Owens.

Knight tagged in after Rosser got some licks in on Owens. Knight has a very, very high leapfrog. Owens was able to come back against him and, at one point during the comeback, he shot a disgusting snot rocket Knight’s way.

Knight was able to put both Owens, then White, into a Boston crab, but Hikuleo entered the ring to shut him down. When White tagged back in, he mockingly played air guitar in Tanahashi’s face.

Hikuleo blasted Knight with a front-handed chop in the corner before ragdolling him into the same corner with a toss. Owens used a back rake on Knight.

After working him over for a few more minutes, Knight was able to connect with a sky-high dropkick on Owens before tagging out to Tanahashi.

White had entered the ring at this point and Tanahashi pointed his finger at him as he walked through the ropes into the ring. Tanahashi ducked a lariat from White, dashed to the opposite corner to take out Hikuleo on the apron, and then took White down with a flying forearm shot. He followed up with a rolling senton from the second rope for two.

White slowed Tanahashi down with a dragon screw leg whip before scoring a nearfall with a Bladebuster. When White put Tanahashi in a rear chinlock, the crowd was chanting and split for both men.

Later, Tana and Rosser did tandem dragon screw leg whips. He’d then use one on former rival, Hikuleo, too. Tanahashi reappeared and took Hikuleo down with a Slingblade. Rosser did an Earthquake squash next, followed by Knight coming down on Hikuleo with a standing frog splash. Knight was fired up and yelled “Let’s go!” before locking Hikuleo in a Boston crab. While Knight had Hikuleo in the crab, Tana locked Owens in the Texas Cloverhold, and Rosser locked White in his crossface chicken wing submission in a great photo moment.

Bullet Club eventually broke free. Hikuleo regained ground and put Knight down hard with a snap powerslam before chokeslamming him for the pin and the win for Bullet Club.

Afterward, White got on the mic and teased doing a babyface style promo. The California crowd loved him and chanted, “Thank you, Jay!” and it sounded like at first he was going to praise them. “I’m proof that NJPW Strong has been a f*cking success,” he said, mentioning wrestlers from the LA Dojo and Team Filthy for making the show great. Owens and Hikuleo looked confused and thrown off by White’s sudden show of gratitude.

“Oh, I almost misspoke. Of course, I was always going to win this, with or without you! You really think I needed your support to win this?” He pointed at his IWGP title. “You should be thanking me!” The crowd began thanking him. “I don’t need Strong—Strong needs me!” He also mentioned that the crowd “wouldn’t have ever seen the likes of the guys in the back” if it weren’t for his hard work. He then did his usual spiel about selling out Madison Square Garden before claiming it was the Switchblade Era and exiting.

Final thoughts:

This was one of the more well-rounded episodes of NJPW Strong in the last few weeks with the main event really feeling like an important, big-time match. That and the singles bout between Yehi and Bateman were the standouts this week.

NJPW Strong: High Alert from Charlotte, North Carolina begins airing next week with stars like Jon Moxley, Hiromu Takahashi and El Desperado scheduled for upcoming episodes, as well as the finals of the Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship between TMDK and Aussie Open.

NJPW Strong results: Openweight Tag Team tournament begins

NJPW Strong: Ignition from Hollywood, California kicked off tonight, which featured two first round matches in the STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship tournament.

Christopher Daniels and announcer Ian Riccaboni appeared at the top of the program to explain Karl Fredericks’ absence from the scheduled Openweight Tag Team Tournament. NJPW aired an angle this year which had Fredericks asking Daniels to be his tag partner in the upcoming tournament.

Daniels explained that with such a high level of talent in the tag tournament, he’d be smart to simply step aside and allow a more established unit to take his and Fredericks’ spot. He also explained that with his 29-year background in wrestling, he also knew that opportunities like this don’t often come by, and that if he’s to win the tournament, he’d need a partner who matched his drive and ambition to win.

Daniels then brought out Yuya Uemura. He told Uemura that he had the same fire and heart as he did, and that together they could surprise many teams and become the inaugural tag team champions. Uemura said “Let’s go!” and the two shook hands. Daniels is masterful at this sort of thing and did a good job of smoothing over loose ends. Simple, short, and effective.

STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship, Round 1: Christopher Daniels & Yuya Uemura defeated The Factory (Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo) w/ QT Marshall to advance to the semi-finals

Good opener. The crowd loved Daniels & Uemura and loved to hate The Factory. The heel team were in control early. Daniels took a beating for a bit, but when the five-minute call sounded, he was able to power up and tag out to a fresh Uemura, who re-entered the ring afire with forearms. He has a great-looking flying forearm a la Tito Santana. Uemura landed a running bulldog on Solo, which the crowd loved. He earned a close near-fall after a back suplex, but Comoroto rushed in to break up the pin. He beat on Uemura despite being the illegal man.

Uemura tagged out to Daniels and they double-teamed “The Freak Beast,” Comoroto. When Comoroto ran towards the two, Daniels low-bridged him, pulling the top rope down and letting Comoroto spill out onto the floor. The stocky Uemura followed up with a huge pescado out onto Comoroto.

Inside the ring, Daniels caught Solo with a standing uranage and pinned him after a picturesque double-jump moonsault for the win. Daniels & Uemura advance to the semi-finals of the tag tournament.

JONAH defeated Taylor Rust

Rust had trouble with JONAH’s size early on. He tried chopping him down with low kicks as they circled each other. Despite JONAH’s positioning as heel, the crowd clearly preferred JONAH to Rust, who would crush Rust with a running avalanche a few minutes into this. Rust countered quickly and continued working over JONAH’s legs. JONAH answered back with a buckle bomb.

A fan began chanting “N-X-T!” at JONAH, who pointed at the fan and took a few steps. His response is hard to catch on the broadcast, but inside the venue, it was clear as crystal: “That 2.0 s*** sucks.” The crowd went wild for the line and began chanting “JO-NAH!” over and over.

JONAH blasted Rust with chops out on the floor. Rust threw a few shots in return, but JONAH stayed in control. Back in the ring, JONAH leveled Rust with a back elbow.

After around five minutes of action, the pace began to slow, with JONAH neutralizing Rust on the mat, squeezing him with a waistlock. JONAH went for a splash but Rust moved. He caught JONAH with a scissor kick. JONAH answered with a fireman’s carry throw. Rust would lay JONAH out moments later with a Samoan drop of his own, where he carried JONAH from the corner to the middle of the ring. Rust is damn strong. He followed up with a super-shallow swanton bomb for two.

Rust would ground & pound JONAH with elbows and kicks before locking him in a modified Rings of Saturn submission. JONAH earned a rope break, and both were back to their feet. They traded big strikes. JONAH caught Rust with a lariat, then wrecked him with a spear before squashing him with a splash off the top rope for the win. JONAH remains undefeated in NJPW Strong.

STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship, Round 1: TMDK (Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls) defeated West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) to advance to the semi-finals

This was very good. I don’t believe Haste & Nicholls have appeared together as a single unit for a long time, maybe since their time together in NXT.

Nelson and Nicholls started things off. Nelson whipped his t-shirt at Haste, who was standing on the apron in the red corner. Since both teams play heel, I liked how Riccaboni described them as having different momentums. They do work different styles, with TMDK falling more on the high octane, high impact side, while WCWC prefers to slowly tenderize their opponents before putting them away with impressive double-team finishes.

Haste landed a nice Japanese-style armdrag. Nelson eventually out-powered Haste and slammed him into the blue corner before tagging Isaacs into the match. Isaacs held Haste in a delayed vertical suplex position for over 20 seconds before dropping him. He and Nelson then flexed for the crowd in celebration.

WCWC trapped Haste in the corner and picked him apart, pounding and stomping away. Isaacs landed a backbreaker and Nelson went in for the pin, but only for two. Later, he caught Haste with a jumping knee, then climbed to the top rope. Before he could dive, a reanimated Shane Haste dashed up to the second rope and launched Nelson with a single-arm suplex.

Isaacs and Nicholls were tagged back into the match after this. They duked it out for a few, but Isaacs would tag Nelson back in, and WCWC then laid Nicholls out with a suplex-power bomb combination for a two-count on Nicholls.

When Jorel Nelson went for a German suplex, Nicholls countered and spiked Nelson with a DDT before tagging Haste back in. Haste landed a pretty dropkick on Nelson before crashing into both members of WCWC with a leg lariat in the corner. Nicholls then powerslammed Isaacs and stayed on top of him so that Haste could launch himself off of Nicholl’s back for a cannonball into the corner onto Nelson.

TMDK connected with the Tank Buster on Nelson, but Isaacs rushed in for the save. WCWC took Nicholls out with a double-team Dominator-facebuster combo.

Isaacs caught Haste in the corner and flung him off with a spinning avalanche powerslam. Nelson followed that up with a nice diving elbow drop.

WCWC called for the finish, but when Nelson bounced off the ropes, Nicholls yanked Nelson out of the ring by his ankles, then served him a lariat on the floor. In the ring, Haste blasted Isaacs with a high roundhouse kick. TMDK then put him away with Hell in the Elevator for the win. TMDK advances to the semi-finals.

Final thoughts:

Yet another solid, watchable episode of NJPW Strong that lasted under an hour.

Next week sees Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso) vs. The Midnight Heat (Eddie Pearl & Ricky Gibson) and The Dark Order (Evil Uno & Alan Angels) vs. Aussie Open (Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher) as the STRONG Openweight Tag Team tournament continues. 

NJPW Strong results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson

Tonight saw the second installment of Collision tapings from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which were hosted by Ian Riccaboni and Matt Rehwoldt.

Team Filthy (JR Kratos & West Coast Wrecking Crew) defeated Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC

Coughlin debuted his new post-Young Lion look before the match. He’s now “The Android” Alex Coughlin, walking to the ring wearing a Terminator-meets-Big Van Vader exoskeleton body armor type of thing. With that mustache of his, if you were to put him in a helmet, he’d look just like Man-at-Arms from Masters of the Universe.

Coughlin and Kratos went back and forth before the match got started. Before he got into the ring, Kratos threw a cardboard sign at Coughlin. Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs of West Coast Wrecking Crew went at the Young Lions, Knight and DKC, shoving and jaw-jacking. The crowd started chanting “F*CK YOU, KRA-TOS!” All this action and the bell hadn’t even rung yet.

Nelson and Knight were to start the match off, but once the bell sounded, Kratos went right after Coughlin, ambushing him and whipping him into the barricade at ringside.

Nelson and Knight traded moves. Knight did a high standing frog splash for two. Coughlin came in later and launched Knight onto Isaacs. Team Filthy reconvened on the floor while the babyfaces posed in the ring. While they weren’t paying attention, Team Filthy came back into the ring and took out the three LA Dojo trainees. Moments later, Kratos held Knight up in a hanging vertical suplex while Nelson and Isaacs used hanging vertical suplexes of their own on Coughlin and DKC, while they were on the floor and on opposite sides of the ring. So, we got triple hanging vertical suplexes from different areas in and around the ring.

Team Filthy worked over Kevin Knight for a few more minutes until he was able to tag out to Coughlin, who went suplex-crazy. He deadlifted both Isaacs and Nelson with gutwrench suplexes before slamming them again with a double backdrop suplex. Wow.

When Coughlin lifted Isaacs up on his shoulders, Knight was able to get enough air to dropkick Isaacs off of Coughlin’s shoulders. I don’t know who has the highest vertical leap in pro wrestling right now, but if I had to put money on it, I’d say with confidence that it’s Kevin Knight. This young man “has hops,” as the kids say.

Towards the end of the match, Coughlin and Kratos were finally in the ring together, one on one. The crowd heated up before they’d even touched. This slow-burning program between Kratos and Coughlin is one of the tightest and most effective rivalries going right now. I’ve said this in the past, but these two are building to a massive blow-off match down the road some day, and it’s going to be special.

They traded stiff shots. The crowd was 100% behind Coughlin. Kratos eventually laid “The Android” out with a falling lariat. When Kratos went for an avalanche in the corner, Coughlin caught him in mid-air. The crowd gasped. Coughlin launched the larger Kratos over his head with a front suplex. Kratos rolled to the floor, so Coughlin followed up with a pescado dive, taking Kratos out.

In the ring, the DKC lit Isaacs up with DK Fire chops until Nelson broke it up. The finish saw WCWC first take out Knight with a cool-looking fireman’s carry toss-to-German suplex, then the DKC with a Claymore Kick-brainbuster combo.

Well after the bell sounded, Coughlin and Kratos continued fighting on the floor, and in the ring. Security had to break them up. Kratos teased jumping back into the ring for more, but flipped Coughlin off and walked to the back.

Ariya Daivari defeated Delirious

Delirious bounced off all four ropes to avoid contact with Daivari, evading him, then used a lariat to lay Daivari out. He did nine leg drops before Daivari rolled to the floor.

Daivari used a big uranage slam on Delirious for two. He superkicked Delirious then pinned him after a hammerlock lariat.

Brody King defeated Jake Something

Once he stepped into the ring, King received a star’s ovation from the Philadelphia crowd.

Something, most known for his time spent with IMPACT, is roughly the same size as King, which is somewhat rare in the context of NJPW Strong. He took King out with a jumping avalanche. They traded chops. King later spiked Something with a piledriver and earned a nearfall for it. They clobbered each other with lariats; neither would fall down. King caught Something with a rolling elbow that brought Something to a knee. King bounced off the ropes, but Something decked him with a lariat, sending King to the mat. King answered with a release German suplex. Five minutes in, they collided mid-air when both went for a cross body-block at the same time.

After a few moments on the mat, they were back on their feet trading shots. King bullied Something into the corner with a flurry of Tenryu-styled chops & punches. Something responded with a spear into the corner.

Something was able put King down with a Liger Bomb for a close two-count. He clotheslined King over the top rope and onto the floor, then dove onto him with a tope and landed on his feet. Something is super athletic for a dude his size.

King finished Something off with a huge lariat and the Gonzo Bomb for the win. This was short but great, and these two had good chemistry together.

Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Chris Dickinson

Tanahashi got the type of response you’d expect from the Philly crowd in attendance. It looked like everyone was on their feet.

They went hold for hold in the center of the ring for the first few minutes. While no titles were on the line, it had the pace and feel of a championship bout.

They grappled into the corner and were forced to break and reposition themselves. Tanahashi audibly asked for a clean break, but Dickinson snuck in a kick as they were breaking from the tie-up. Dickinson whipped Tanahashi into the corner; Tana countered with a back elbow followed by a cross body-block from the middle rope. He then played some air guitar to celebrate before tossing the air guitar into the audience.

A bit later, the two found themselves locked against the ropes once again, and when the referee ordered a break, Tanahashi tried sneaking a kick of his own in while they were breaking, but Dickinson caught Tana’s foot and brought him down hard with a dragon screw leg whip. The crowd booed. Dickinson then did some sick air guitar of his own, much to the dismay of the audience.

Dickinson began attacking Tanahashi’s left leg. He slammed it into the mat, and later, while Dickinson stood on the floor, he rammed the leg across the ring post. A dueling chant broke out.

Dickinson continued working over Tanahashi’s knee, using a combination of joint-locks and hard stomps and strikes to the leg. Dickinson busted out the dreaded air bass and patronized the hell out of Tana with it. This must have been what did it for Tanahashi, because a short moment later he was able to bounce off the ropes and catch Dickinson with a flying forearm smash. The crowd chanted “GO ACE!”

Tanahashi did a somersault senton off the second rope. When Dickinson went to kick him, Tana waved “bye-bye” and put Dickinson down with his own signature dragon screw leg whip, then followed with a slingblade. Tanahashi then charged up to the top turnbuckle for a High Fly Attack bodypress, but Dickinson used Tanahashi’s momentum to roll through and come out on top of Tanahashi. From there, he immediately slapped on a figure-four leglock. Tanahashi was eventually able to reverse it, but Dickinson was able to grab the bottom rope for a break. Ten minutes had passed at this point.

They traded elbows in the center of the ring. Tanahashi’s chest was pink from all of the chops throughout the match. Dickinson put Tanahashi in an STF, but Tana was able to grab the bottom rope for the break.

When Dickinson went for a brainbuster, Tanahashi countered with the Twist-and-Shout followed by an Anarchy Suplex. He put Dickinson down with another slingblade but could only keep Dickinson down for two. Tanahashi finally put Dickinson away in the end with the High Fly Flow.

Afterwards, Tanahashi offered his hand to Dickinson, who accepted, then bowed in respect before exiting the ring.

Tanahashi then grabbed the mic and cut an enthusiastic promo thanking the crowd. “You are amazing!!” He also apologized for his English, to which the crowd responded via chant: “IT’S O-K! IT’S O-K!”

Tanahashi then treated us to a final air guitar performance, which included the ceremonial Passing of the Air Guitar from crowd to ring. Tanahashi made a great catch before rocking the hell out as the show wrapped.

Final thoughts:

The opening six-man tag team match and the main event of this week’s NJPW Strong were this week’s highlights. The Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos rivalry isn’t even close to stale and continues to impress. And this week’s main event was arguably a perfect pro wrestling match; not the best, not the most exciting ever, but, functionally, it was perfect in a lot of ways, and a perfect main event for an hour-long wrestling show on a Saturday night.

I might be in the minority on this, but I actually preferred Dickinson’s match with Tanahashi to his recent bouts with Minoru Suzuki. All were excellent, but I think Dickinson really shined with Tanahashi for some reason. He’s the ideal opponent for Tanahashi in terms of size, style, skill, etc., and I hope they’re able to do this one again in the future but for higher stakes—or at least for a longer time.

Next week sees STRONG Openweight Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor take on Fred Rosser in a match that stipulates that if Rosser wins, he becomes the new champion, though if Rosser loses, he must leave NJPW Strong. 

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. 

Wrestling Observer Radio: Stephanie McMahon, Wrestling at the Chase history, RAW booking, more

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including Stephanie McMahon and the Business Insider article about her departure, another new WWE hire, Stardom and New Japan doing a joint show, ratings, UFC this weekend, Wrestling at the Chase history, the RAW show and shitty booking and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: Business Insider article on Stephanie McMahon

9:25: NJPW/Stardom to run joint show

13:10: Ratings

18:38: Wrestling at the Chase special

40:16: UFC this weekend

44:44: Raw recap

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NJPW Strong results: Tomohiro Ishii vs. Big Damo

Tonight saw the final installment from NJPW Strong’s Mutiny tapings in Hollywood, California.

KEITA and Yuya Uemura defeated Kevin Blackwood and Lucas Riley

Uemura and Blackwood started things off. Uemura was quick on the turnaround off the first lock-up, spinning out of Blackwood’s hands and taking him over with a flying mare—and got a pop for it. It’s a sequence many of us have seen ad nauseam, but this crowd was here for Uemura and whatever he did.

Moments later, the crowd heated up when he landed a shoulderblock, then a deep Steamboat-style arm drag. They went back and forth with Blackwood scoring a hip toss.

Blackwood returned Uemura’s attack with some kicks until KEITA and Riley were in next. Keita landed a big modified backbreaker which received a loud response from the crowd. Blackwood tagged in and landed a low dropkick to KEITA’s head while Riley held him upside down. Riley then hit KEITA with a low dropkick to the back of his head.

KEITA tried tagging out, but Blackwood pulled him back and landed a German suplex for two. KEITA came back with a jawbreaker and an upkick to tag Uemura back in. The crowd came alive for his return to the ring. He took Blackwood out with a flying forearm smash that’d make Tito Santana proud. This kid is on another level right now. Blackwood used a big roundhouse kick to counter, knocking Uemura down to the mat. 

KEITA and Uemura double-teamed Riley after KEITA threw Blackwood to the floor.

Before the finish, each wrestler seemed to have gotten a few of their last licks in. KEITA took out Blackwood. Riley took out KEITA. Then, finally, it was Uemura who would take out Riley, landing a Frankensteiner for the win. This was a good opener, but I need to mention that Uemura is special. Now might be the best time to hop on the bandwagon because he is hitting his stride in 2022.

Afterward, Blackwood and Riley cut a promo backstage where Riley explained that it was all right and that the second time would be better. When he attempted to confer with Blackwood, he was met with frustration and contempt. Blackwood blamed Riley for the loss. He then said that he was still 1–0 in NJPW and reiterated that it was Riley who had lost the match not himself. 

Bullet Club (El Phantasmo & Chris Bey) defeated Alex Zayne and Christopher Daniels

Zayne and Bey were in first and had a quick, creative exchange. Zayne did a standing corkscrew senton for two.

Daniels, at 51, is still looking real fit for his age. Bey would tag out to El Phantasmo. He would later jump off the ropes and rake Daniels’ back with his fingernails. Bey did a superfluous backrake spot of his own, too. They used a combo that saw ELP earn a two after landing on Daniels with a standing moonsault.

Daniels later used an STO, finally freeing himself up from Bey. He tagged out to a fresh Zayne who landed a few punches before a standing Harlem Hangover/Harlem sidekick combo for two. 

Bey and Daniels fell out of the ring. Zayne went for a shooting star press, but missed. He landed on his feet and rolled out of the way, but Phantasmo laid him out with the C4 for two. He then put Zayne out for good with his Sudden Impact superkick which Zayne took a Fatu-style spinning bump for.

Tomohiro Ishii defeated Big Damo

The story is that these two had a match seven years ago in RevPro out of the UK where Damo actually took the victory.

The two locked up, but Damo immediately shoved Ishii into the red corner. Both elbowed and shouldered the hell out of each other next. Damo had the advantage early on, though Ishii constantly barked at him to bring more of it on.

There were a few hecklers in the crowd who ganged up on Damo and told him to shave his back. Damo handled them well, at one point telling them off before giving the hecklers a full, proud view of his back, arms outstretched.

While this was a good moment, the ringside trolls at the show wouldn’t let up, regardless of what was going on which definitely hurt the vibe of the main event as a whole. Thankfully, much of it was inaudible on the recording. In a different setting, this match could have been much better.

Ishii tried to come back, whipping Damo into the corner and crashing into him with a corner lariat. Ishii unloaded his version of Genichiro Tenryu’s goo punch–chop sequence in the corner; jab, chop, jab chop. 

Damo countered the attack later with a running crossbody block and a jump kick to Ishii’s face after trading more blows. Tomohiro Ishii: perpetual underdog.

Ishii survived a fisherman’s superplex, standing up almost immediately after landing on the mat. He fired up which the crowd fed on. Damo missed another jump kick and Ishii then put the big man down with a vertical suplex. 

Damo hit a huge John Woo dropkick before using a slingshot senton into the ring. He pinned Ishii for two as the ten-minute announcement sounded over the house PA.

When Damo went for a Vader Bomb, Ishii moved out of the way and Damo crashed into the mat face down. He elbowed Ishii who responded with headbutts and a hard headbutt of his own. He took Damo out with a running lariat for two. Later, he scored a sliding lariat for two before putting Damo away for good with a big vertical drop brainbuster for the win in a little over 13 minutes. 

Final thoughts:

The main event was good, but would have been better if it hadn’t gone on last at the Mutiny tapings which was a good four hours into the card. Fans sounded restless and it seemed to affect the match quality.

The opener between Uemura and KEITA vs. Blackwood and Riley had much better energy which makes sense since at the tapings, it was the second match of the night. Nitpicks aside, this was a solid episode to wrap the Mutiny tapings with. 

Next week kicks off NJPW Strong’s next “tour” titled Collision, which was taped in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania last month.

Wrestling Observer Radio: MJF promo, Dynamite and NXT 2.0, Best of the Super Junior, WWE and A&E, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the situation with MJF, his promo on Dynamite, New Japan Best of the Super Juniors update, WWE and A&E, your ratings report, full recaps of AEW Dynamite and NXT 2.0, and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: MJF’s pipebomb promo & other LA show thoughs

9:55: Best of the Super Juniors update

14:37: WWE & A&E

19:27: Ratings

25:40: UFC on ABC this weekend

27:20: AEW Dynamite recap

53:10: Hell in a Cell updates

54:44: NXT notes

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NJPW Strong results: United Empire vs. TMDK

Tonight saw the third week of tapings from NJPW Strong: Mutiny from Hollywood, California.

Stray Dog Army (Bateman, Misterioso & Barrett Brown) defeated Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight & The DKC

This was a good opener. The match itself felt like its main function was to prop up a future program between Yehi & Bateman. The teams scuffled and jaw-jacked during their ring introductions. Yehi and Bateman went right at each other.

Fans in attendance were catching on to Bateman’s bark. He barks at the crowd and, now, they bark back.

Knight and Misterioso kicked things off for their teams. They had a fast exchange up top. Knight did some flying around the ring, bouncing from rope to rope before arm-dragging Misterioso to the mat. The DKC and Barrett Brown were together next. They too had great chemistry and fire. The DKC asked Brown, “Do you wanna fight?!” and then traded chops.

He and Yehi had great fire whenever they were together during the match. When the bout spilled onto the floor, they again went at it. There were more than a few times in this match where the fight shifted to ringside instead of between the ropes.

Knight landed on Bateman with a pescado on the floor. Misterioso landed one of his own next, taking out Knight.

Back in the ring, The DKC caught Brown with a flying Liu Kang-style kick off the middle rope. The crowd began chanting “D-K-C!” He went for DKC Fire next, but Brown countered, shooting him into his team’s corner.

In the end, Misterioso caught the DKC with a guillotine leg drop off the second rope for the win. Stray Dog Army continued beating down Yehi’s team after the bell.

– A promo from Big Damo (fka WWE’s Killian Dain) aired next. He explained how Tomohiro Ishii had made his debut in England seven years ago with RevPro. He then explained that it was he who beat Ishii upon said debut, and in Damo’s backyard, to boot. He said that Ishii is now NJPW’s gatekeeper figure these days, so he wanted a shot at him on NJPW Strong because he’d beat Ishii just like he did in England seven years ago.

David Finlay defeated Blake Christian

They had a quick exchange before Finlay dipped out to the floor to regroup. Christian hit a low basement dropkick and later used a tope con giro to the floor before using a high crossbody block back in the ring, but only for a count of two.

At just over ten minutes in, Finlay scored a backdrop suplex for a two count. Christian countered with a big lariat. Finlay did a backdrop on the apron.

Finlay teased using his sheleighleigh on Christian. Christian did a 450 splash to a draped Finlay for a close two. Finlay caught Christian with a stunner coming off the ropes and then used the Trash Panda for the win. He again sort of teased using the sheleighleigh on Christian after they finished, but instead he shook Christian’s hand afterward.

Backstage, Finlay cut a promo comparing Christian to a young Will Ospreay before explaining that his next goal would be to win his first NJPW singles title. He said after being with the company for seven or eight years, it was time for a singles title win. He’s been a NJPW tag team champion, but hasn’t won singles gold yet. “I am coming; expect me.”

TMDK (JONAH, Bad Dude Tito & Shane Haste) defeated United Empire (Jeff Cobb & Aussie Open)

All of United Empire came to the ring for the match, so Great O-Khan, Aaron Henare and TJP were at ringside.

Kyle Fletcher of Aussie Open and JONAH kicked the match off. They shoved each other before tying up. JONAH bullied Fletcher into the corner. Fletcher caught him with an enzuigiri, but when Fletcher was coming off the ropes for an attack, JONAH shoved him in mid-air. He flexed at Fletcher in the corner. Cobb tagged in next, which the crowd immediately responded to, but JONAH decided to tag out to Shane Haste instead. 

Haste did a haughty mock walk of Cobb with his chest and shoulders out and all. This amused Cobb, who would later use Haste’s back as a surfboard for a little cowabunga action. This also elicited what could have been Alex Koslov’s best line on commentary in the show’s history when he deadpanned the following: “Shane Haste was a good surfboard.”

Cobb held Haste in a vertical suplex and then tagged in Mark Davis while simultaneously passing Haste over to Davis. Remember, Haste is still hanging in the air upside down. This was a suplex transfer. Davis then tagged Fletcher in and suplex transferred Haste over to him. Fletcher let him down for a moment, then finally snap suplexed Haste onto the mat.

Haste came back with a running cannonball into the corner onto Fletcher. Bad Dude Tito was next and put the boots to Fletcher before tagging JONAH back into the match.

JONAH and Haste worked Fletcher over for a while. Fletcher eventually was able to counter and drop Haste with a brainbuster. He tagged out to Davis, a proverbial house of fire at this point, just past ten minutes in.

Bad Dude Tito took Davis out with a Buff Blockbuster. Aussie Open soon took out Tito with a few double-team combinations. Cobb landed a standing moonsault onto Tito. Haste later blasted Davis with a lariat after a wild back-and-forth between teams. Haste, Davis and the rest were all laid out. The crowd began chanting “NEW JA-PAN!”

Then, finally, Cobb and JONAH got in the ring together, the moment we’d all had been waiting for. They are almost mirror images of each other. The build, the hair, the singlets, the fact that on first glance we expect neither to wrestle the way they do.

They squared off and rammed into each other with shoulderblocks. Neither would go down. The crowd ate it up. The spot wrapped when they crashed into each other with running crossbody blocks. Their fight continued onto the floor, outside the ring and effectively out of the match.

Back in the ring, we saw Aussie Open put Bad Dude Tito away after more double-team work, finishing him with a double-Last of the Dragon-type maneuver.

Afterward, all of United Empire got into the ring together. Great O-Khan grabbed the mic and addressed the crowd in Japanese: “Bow down, peasants!” Now you understand what Aussie Open can do!” He referred to the team as United Empire’s “new assets.”

Final thoughts:

The main event is the go-to match on this week’s episode of NJPW Strong. Jeff Cobb and JONAH’s rivalry could be great down the road, as they teased here, plus Aussie Open were fantastic in their NJPW Strong debut. The match itself had a rapid-fire pace, similar to a “NJPW proper” tag match at Korakuen Hall.

Next week sees the final episode of NJPW Strong’s Mutiny series with Tomohiro Ishii taking on Big Damo in the main event. 

Filthy Four Daily: Tom Lawlor talks doom at hands of Fred Rosser, Smackdown, Capitol Collision

FILTHY FOUR DAILY with Bryan Alvarez and FORMER NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including Tom’s demise at the hands of Fred Rosser, where he goes next, tons of thoughts on a good episode of Smackdown as well as New Japan Strong and Capitol Collision, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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NJPW Strong results: Jay White vs. Hikuleo

Tonight’s episode kicked off the NJPW Strong: Mutiny series, which was taped last month in Hollywood.

Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin, & Adrian Quest defeated Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, & Danny Limelight)

Romero got another loud reaction from the crowd when he arrived. He’s NJPW Strong’s resident Liger figure, always there, always loved regardless of the situation.

The last time Alex Coughlin was at The Vermont Hollywood for NJPW Strong, he donned the traditional Young Lion black trunks/black boots look, but upon beating JR Kratos in a singles match, Coughlin graduated out of Young Lionhood, meaning he had new ring gear. He kind of resembled Jon Moxley during his first NJPW run, with grappling shorts and wrestling shoes.

Limelight and Quest were in first and got into fisticuffs. Limelight got good heat after doing his “ay, Papi” dance, but then Quest caught him in a crucifix and scored a quick two. Romero would tag in later and rifle off his Forever Clotheslines in the corner. People loved it.

When Black Tiger tagged in, he and Limelight used a double-team Reverse U-Crusher.

Kratos tagged in. He chucked Romero down onto the mat with a big body slam while flipping off the crowd. He and Tiger then posed over a laid out Romero. Strong fans love to hate Team Filthy and made it known here.

Romero came back after connecting with a rewind kick and Sliced Bread on Tiger. He took out Limelight with a basement dropkick before tagging out to Alex Coughlin.

Coughlin and Kratos went at it next. They are always awesome together. Coughlin teased a bodyslam on Kratos but Kratos slipped out of the ring after escaping. Adrian Quest followed after Kratos, diving off the top rope onto the floor with a somersault dive.

In the ring, Coughlin was finally able to hoist Kratos from a bodyslam position into a bridging fall-away slam. He only scored a two-count, though, as Tiger broke up the pin to make the save for Kratos.

Moments later, Coughlin would send Danny Limelight spinning after a running lariat, then pinned him with a bridging deadlift German suplex in just over eight minutes.

Before the ring announcer could even finish announcing the results, Kratos ambushed Coughlin, taking him out with a forearm, then laying him out with a seated Bossman Slam onto a chair. Coughlin was stretchered from the ring to the back. Again, the rivalry these two have is fantastic, and the slow burn to whenever they do a singles match for a title, well, that’ll be something.

We saw a quick backstage promo from Chris Dickinson next. He said that after months of sitting on the shelf sidelined with an injury, he was ready to make his return at NJPW Mutiny. He explained that during his first NJPW Strong run, it was Ren Narita who was the one to stop him dead in his tracks. Dickinson said things would not end well for Narita, and that he’d better bring all he has, saying “I’m going to whip your ass and leave you in the dust.”

Handicap Match: West Coast Wrecking Crew (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson) defeated Fred Rosser

If Rosser had won this, he’d have earned a shot at “Filthy” Tom Lawlor’s STRONG Openweight championship.

Royce Isaacs and Jorel Nelson danced their way to the ring alongside their captain, Lawlor. Lawlor, who donned a denim romper for tonight’s show, would join Ian Riccaboni and Alex Koslov on commentary.

When Fred Rosser made his way to the ring, he tossed something to a kid in one of the front rows. You couldn’t see it on camera, but this young fan was very excited about it.

WCWC ambushed Rosser before the bell, but Rosser would come back to clean house, dumping both Nelson and Isaacs to the floor for more of a beatdown. There were no count-outs or tagging in this match, by the way, so these three could have hypothetically been brawling ringside all night. Rosser backdropped Nelson onto the apron, then used a running Death Valley Bomb on him inside the ring, but Nelson rolled out of the ring to avoid getting pinned.

Rosser later put Isaacs in a crossface chicken wing. When Rosser went to the top rope, Nelson appeared on the apron and pushed him off. WCWC then began double-teaming Rosser. They’d then hop on to the stage where announcers Riccaboni and Koslov were sitting and posed for the crowd.

Back in the ring, Rosser returned the attack with a double clothesline. As soon as he built some momentum, Isaacs took Rosser to the floor again and put him down hard with a slingshot powerslam onto the floor.

WCWC put Rosser away moments later with a combination brainbuster/Claymore kick finish. The crowd booed.

Lawlor got on mic afterwards and said Rosser was just like the “losers” who came to see the show. He said Rosser is just like everyone else, always asking for favors or handouts.

“A champion acts a certain way. A champion looks a certain way. And quite frankly, Fred, you don’t even look like a worthy challenger,” Lawlor said. He then told Rosser that he actually looked better bald, then revealed a lock of Rosser’s hair he had kept from when Team Filthy shaved Rosser’s head in Philadelphia last year. Lawlor then made Rosser an offer: Since he didn’t beat WCWC to earn a title shot, Lawlor said that if Rosser shaved his head again, he’d consider a title match.

“How bad do you want it, huh? How bad do you want it, Fred?” Lawlor kept bullying Rosser until Rosser silently accepted the deal. Jorel Nelson then took a pair of electric clippers and shaved a big chunk into Rosser’s hair.

Rosser would grab the clippers away from Nelson and began shaving his head himself in an effort to prove how serious he was about Lawlor’s title. He kept shaving as he looked Lawlor in the eye. The crowd started chanting “Fred!” Rosser then grabbed the mic and asked if he had earned his title shot yet or not. Lawlor took the mic back and asked the crowd if Rosser earned the shot. Before responding, though, Lawlor took the lock of Rosser’s hair he kept and ate it. Yep, “Filthy” Tom ate more of Fred Rosser’s hair. It looked like he had a big chunk of dip in his mouth. The crowd chanted “You sick f*ck!” at him. Then, they started shouting for him to swallow the hair, which, thankfully, he didn’t. “I’m not like the rest of you,” Lawlor told the audience. Lawlor then said his answer was “no” to the title shot offer.

He then made Rosser another offer: At NJPW Collision in Philadelphia, on Lawlor’s birthday, no less, Lawlor would put his Openweight championship on the line against Rosser, but if Rosser loses, he’d be gone from NJPW Strong for good.

Rosser didn’t give an immediate answer. The crowd cheered him as he exited to the back.

U S of Jay Open Challenge: Jay White defeated Hikuleo

Despite White playing an uncompromising heel role, and despite him booting Hikuleo’s brothers from Bullet Club, most of the crowd still really liked him. Some fans played along and gave him a hard time, but in general, Jay White is super over.

White kept avoiding first contact with Hikuleo by sliding out onto the floor or weaving away from Hikuleo’s hands. Some fans started chanting “F*ck you, Switchblade!,” but then a “Let’s go, Switchblade!” counter-chant started.

Hikuleo decked White, laying forearms into White’s back. On the floor, Hikuleo dropped him on the guardrail with Snake Eyes. “This is what you want?!,” Hikuleo shouted. When Hikuleo missed a chop, his hand banged against the ring post. White tried taking advantage and went for a suplex, but the much bigger Hikuleo wouldn’t budge. White then focused his attack on Hikuleo’s legs, ramming them into the ring post while White stood on the floor. He then wrapped Hikuleo’s face in the vinyl ring apron in an attempt to suffocate him.

In the ring, White continued working over Hikuleo’s leg. Hikuleo countered at one point with a strong Irish whip that launched White into the blue corner. He’d then put White down with a hanging vertical suplex as the ten-minute call sounded.

When he went for the Tongan Driver, White slipped away and kicked Hikuleo in the knee. When Hikuleo ran at him with a lariat, White reversed it into a flatliner. He then drilled the larger Hikuleo with a backdrop driver before scoring a count of two with a Bladebuster.

White would hold his finger to Hikuleo’s head and pull the trigger on his figurative gun. He teased throwing Hikuleo with a head-and-arm back suplex, but Hikuleo fought it off. White bounced off the ropes and took Hikuleo out with a chop block to his knee. He’d take Hikuleo down with a dragon screw leg whip. When he went to apply the TTO submission, Hikuleo kicked White away. White went back after him in the corner, stomping away at Hikuleo’s legs again. The crowd was pretty loud in support of White by this point.

Hikuleo power bombed White, but White avoided getting pinned. He went back to using dragon screws to keep Hikuleo down. When he went for the Bladerunner, Hikuleo countered with a chokeslam, wrapping his giant hand around White’s throat. White kicked Hikuleo in the knee to break it. White chopped him a few times, but Hikuleo powered up and took White to the mat with a short-arm lariat. He blasted White with a chop that was WALTER-level, sound-wise.

Hikuleo caught White off the ropes with a snap powerslam, and again went for the chokeslam, but suddenly White countered and laid Hikuleo out with the Bladerunner for three. The crowd was especially hot for the last 15 seconds.

After the match, White grabbed a chair and teased bashing Hikuleo with it, but then sat down and yelled at him instead. When White referred to himself as the “best f*cking wrestler in the world,” the crowd screamed in agreement. Not everything was audible from White since he didn’t have a microphone, but he’d eventually stand up and shoot Hikuleo the “too sweet” gesture in an attempt at squashing any beef they may have had. After a few moments, Hikuleo gave White a “too sweet” of his own; Hikuleo will remain with Bullet Club.

Final thoughts:

This was a good episode of Strong, though it may have been the heaviest story-driven episode they’ve aired so far. The wrestling was top-notch, like usual, but the show was more angle-heavy than it has been in the past. Despite being taped last month, this episode served as the go-home show for tomorrow’s Capital Collision show in D.C..

Jay White vs. Hikuleo was very good and is worth watching. Along with his brawls with the likes of Fred Rosser and Juice Robinson last year, this was likely the best performance in Hikuleo’s career so far. It’s also interesting how popular White has become since his return tour of the States. He’s always been “Switchblade”, a megalomaniacal wunderkind heel, but lots of fans accept him as a hero.

Wrestling Observer Radio: Forbidden Door PPV, AEW and NXT, Roman Reigns, ratings, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the AEW vs. NJPW Forbidden Door PPV announcement, AEW Dynamite and NXT 2.0 reviews, ratings, Roman Reigns and Tammy Sytch updates, MMA notes and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Start: AEW announces joint PPV with NJPW called Forbidden Door

7:49: Ratings

16:25: Updates on Roman Reigns, Tammy Sytch

19:33: New match for NJPW Wrestling Dontaku 2022

20:25: MMA notes on Jeremy Stephens vs. Clay Collard, Bellator this weekend

27:15: AEW Dynamite recap

53:07: NXT recap

1:07:53: Rampage spoilers

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Wrestling Observer Live: NXT 2.0 review, RAW huge ratings, BIG DAMO interview, more!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is back with tons to talk about including the goofy NXT 2.0 show from Tuesday night with a full review, RAW giant ratings given the giant competition, all the news and more, plus BIG DAMO, the former Killian Dane, joins us to talk New Japan this weekend and his match with Ishii! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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NJPW Strong results: Team Filthy vs. Team Rosser elimination match

Tonight saw the last installment of episodes from the recent NJPW Strong: Rivals taping in Hollywood.

Daniel Garcia defeated Yuya Uemura via submission

This was really good. Yuya Uemura has gotten huge in the past two or three years. He could pass for an American football player now, easily.

They went back and forth down on the mat early on. When they broke, Garcia did a mock clap at Uemura, a patronizing “good for you” gesture. Uemura put Garcia down briefly with a few Ricky Steamboat armdrags, which he has down pat.

Garcia was aggressive in his comeback, stomping, punching and even biting Uemura. He blasted Uemura with a loud chop. Uemura exploded back with a shotgun dropkick and a flying forearm. He earned a two count after dropping a running elbow on Garcia, then another after a backdrop suplex. He planted Garcia with a high-angle German for another count of two. Garcia busted out of Uemura’s double-bolt suplex.

Both men traded elbows and lariats. Garcia went for a sharpshooter, but Uemura rolled Garcia into a cradle for a close nearfall. Garcia next laid Uemura out with a piledriver, which only earned him a two count. Frustrated, Garcia immediately began throwing hammerfists down on Uemura before locking him in a low-angle sharpshooter. Uemura fought the pain while trying to grab the ropes for a break, but in the end he couldn’t take it; Garcia would pick up the win via submission.

Garcia offered up a handshake afterwards, but Uemura shoved Garcia instead. Their rivalry doesn’t appear to be over just yet.

Black Tiger defeated Rocky Romero

This crowd loved Rocky Romero. They started chanting “RO-CKY!” as soon as his music hit. The two started brawling from the get-go. Black Tiger gave Romero a lariat and sent him over the guardrail. Romero then landed a hurricanrana off the guardrail onto the floor.

Tiger landed an elbow to the back of Romero’s head, then used a neckbreaker on him for a two-count. Romero leveled up later on and returned Tiger’s attack with a flurry of chops. The crowd was loud in support of Romero, the fourth Black Tiger. He threw the new Black Tiger into the corner and landed a couple Forever Clotheslines before spiking him with a satellite DDT.

Black Tiger went for the Tiger Driver, but Romero slipped out and locked Tiger in an armbar. Tiger lifted Romero in the air with Romero still attached to Tiger; Tiger planted him with a short powerbomb to shake him off.

Romero came back and tried ripping off Tiger’s mask. Romero took Tiger out with a tope suicida moments later. He threw Tiger back in the ring and landed Sliced Bread, but only for two. The crowd was pretty hot by this point in the match. Romero ran up the corner post for Sliced Bread #2, but Tiger caught Romero and spiked him with a tombstone piledriver. Both wrestlers were flat on the mat as the ten-minute call sounded. Tiger would attempt another Tiger Driver, but Romero reversed it into another frankensteiner. He then caught Tiger with a knee, then tried coming off the ropes with another, but Tiger decked Romero with a huge lariat of his own. He finally used a sloppy Tiger Driver on Romero for the somewhat shock win.

Afterwards, Black Tiger grabbed a kendo stick and looked like he was going after Romero some more, but Romero caught Tiger in an armbar and wouldn’t let go until staff and security got involved.

Ten-Man Tag Team Elimination match: Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor, West Coast Wrecking Crew, JR Kratos & Danny Limelight) defeated Clark Connors, Fred Rosser, Rust Taylor, the DKC & Adrian Quest)

Quick note on the rules: If a wrestler is pinned, submitted, or thrown over the top rope, they are eliminated from the match.

“Filthy” Tom and Danny Limelight trapped Clark Connors in the corner and mauled him just after the bell sounded. Limelight landed a high dropkick, then danced a little. Connors caught Limelight coming off the ropes with a huge pounce and a German suplex that folded Limelight. Quest tagged in later and caught Limelight with a corkscrew bodypress off the second rope. Announcer Alex Koslov mentioned that Quest has been wrestling since he was 13 years old.

Limelight tagged out to Jorel Nelson, who quickly tagged partner Royce Isaacs. West Coast Wrecking crew then grabbed Quest and hoisted him up into a fireman’s carry-into German suplex double-team maneuver. The rest of Team Filthy then stormed the ring and took out their opponents on the opposite side so that they’d have enough room to do the simultaneous five-man Team Filthy Pose.

Later, Quest was able to put Limelight down with a reverse frankensteiner and finally tag out to the DKC, who came in like a house afire. He chopped up Nelson and Isaacs, and Limelight as well until WCWC came into the ring to take out the DKC. They did a slingshot Death Valley bomb onto Nelson’s knees, thus creating a backcracker effect on the aforementioned Death Valley Bomb Isaacs used. The team then pressed the DKC into the air and hurled the Young Lion out of the ring with a double press slam. This was the first official elimination of the match.

WCWC planted Adrian Quest with a spinning vertical suplex into Liger bomb combo and earned a nearfall. Danny Limelight then connected with a high frog splash off the top, but when he went for the pin, Quest rolled Limelight onto his shoulders with a crucifix for the three-count. Limelight was the second elimination of the match.

WCWC went after Fred Rosser next and tried dumping him over the top rope. Rosser bit both Nelson and Isaacs to break free and inch closer towards the center of the ring. Rosser then eliminated Isaacs after connecting with a fireman’s carry gutbuster and a running single-leg basement dropkick to the face, scoring the pinfall.

Rosser and rival Tom Lawlor were in together next, but before they could mix it up, Lawlor distracted the referee for a moment so Jorel Nelson could pop in and low-blow Rosser behind the ref’s back. Nelson would then throw Rosser over the top rope to eliminate him.

Rust Taylor was in next. He and Nelson traded hard forearm shots. Taylor locked Nelson in a single-leg crab/footlock.“Filthy” Tom ran in to break it up, but Taylor back-body dropped him while still holding Nelson in the half-crab. JR Kratos pulled Nelson’s arm closer to the ropes for a break, a blatant and desperate disregard of the rules in front of the referee. Before Nelson could reach the ropes, Clark Connors appeared from around the corner and took Kratos out with a tackle. This meant that Nelson couldn’t get close enough to the bottom rope for a break, so he tapped out and was eliminated. Lawlor took Taylor out with an enzuigiri. Taylor blocked a single-leg with a knee strike and tagged out to Connors. Lawlor and Connors went shot-for-shot in the middle of the ring. Lawlor caught Connors with a triangle choke on the top rope. Lawlor flexed for the crowd as referee Jeremy Marcus yelled at him to break the hold.

While Connors and Lawlor were fighting on the ring apron, Taylor and Kratos were brawling at ringside. Kratos kept trying to assist Lawlor while he was with Taylor on the apron. Connors finally darted across the apron and speared Lawlor, taking both Lawlor and himself onto the floor and out of the match. Connors and Lawlor then brawled around ringside and into the backstage area.

Kratos pounded Taylor with elbow shots, and later used a massive Liger bomb on Taylor to eliminate him from the match. Kratos thought he had won, but Quest appeared from the opposite side of the ring and got in Kratos’ face. In response, Kratos looked at Quest and flipped him the double-bird. Quest landed two low running dropkicks to Kratos’ knee. He flew through the ropes and took out the rest of Team Filthy on the floor.

Kratos welcomed Quest back into the ring with a series of big front-handed chops, then plastered him with a running lariat that turned Quest inside out. Kratos scored the pinfall and was the last man standing, which means Team Filthy are your winners.

Final thoughts:

Yet another solid hour of pro wrestling from NJPW Strong. I thought the standout was the opener, Daniel Garcia vs. Yuya Uemura, though Black Tiger vs. Rocky Romero had the best crowd response and a well-built finish. The ten-man tag did a good job at furthering a few storylines while not repeating the same matches these guys have had in the recent past.

Episodes from the Strong Style Evolved tapings in Tampa will begin airing next week.

Will Ospreay says MLW debut ‘will happen’

Image: NJPW

*This post was updated with new information*

Will Ospreay says his MLW debut “will happen” after all. 

A day after reports emerged that Ospreay’s MLW deal had been nixed, both Ospreay and NJPW envoy Rocky Romero called those reports into question, and Ospreay went as far as to say that his debut with MLW will still take place. 

Ospreay tweeted:

“Lads MLW will happen. Just not when it was meant too. Everyone calm your tits.”

The reports had cited unnamed sources stating that the working relationship between MLW and New Japan Pro Wrestling reportedly came to an end in mid-November, which meaning former IWGP Champion Ospreay would not appear for the company as previously announced.

Neither MLW nor Court Bauer have commented publicly about either the relationship or Ospreay.

In October, MLW announced that Ospreay would be debuting for the company in the fall, but didn’t announce any specific date. At that point, they had a November event planned and later announced a co-promoted show with The Crash that happened this past Friday in Mexico.

Ospreay has been staying busy since returning from injury in August, working for NJPW in the U.S. and both RevPro and OTT overseas.

MLW next runs in January in Dallas, Texas.