Champion vs. champion match set for Saturday’s NJPW Strong

It will be IWGP World Heavyweight Champion vs. NJPW Strong Openweight Champion in the main event of this week’s NJPW Strong. 

In a non-title affair, IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Jay White takes on Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser in the headliner of Saturday’s NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown episode. 

Also announced for Saturday, Bullet Club’s Juice Robinson will face Jake Something in another singles bout. 

In Saturday’s opener, Aussie Open’s Kyle Fletcher and Mark Davis of The United Empire will take on Greg Sharpe and Jakob Austin Young. 

Here is the full card for Saturday’s episode: 

NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown, Saturday, November 26, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Jay White vs. NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser in a non-title bout
  • Juice Robinson vs. Jake Something
  • Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis of The United Empire) vs. Greg Sharpe & Jakob Austin Young

Minoru Suzuki vs. Fred Yehi set for this week’s NJPW Strong

NJPW has announced the full lineup for Saturday’s New Japan Showdown episode of Strong. 

In the main event, Minoru Suzuki will take on Fred Yehi in the first singles meeting between the two. 

In the second match of the night, Jordan Cruz and Adrian Quest will tag against Team Filthy’s JR Kratos and Danny Limelight. 

In Saturday’s opener, Kenny King will take on Che Cabrera. This will be King’s first appearance on an NJPW card since the G1 Supercard event at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 2019. 

Strong’s New Japan Showdown series was taped on October 16 at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles.

Here is the full lineup for Saturday: 

NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown, Saturday, November 12, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Fred Yehi
  • Adrian Quest & Jordan Cruz vs. Team Filthy (Danny Limelight & JR Kratos)
  • Kenny King vs. Che Cabrera

NJPW Strong Showdown spoilers: Jay White, Tanahashi, Suzuki in action

Results: PWInsider

NJPW was back at The Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles on Sunday night for its New Japan Showdown set of Strong tapings. Here are the results from the show:

– NJPW paid tribute to Antonio Inoki before the taping got underway.

– Peter Avalon defeated Keita

– Team Filthy (JR Kratos & Danny Limelight) defeated Jordan Cruz & Adrian Quest

– Kenny King defeated Che Cabrera

– Aussie Open (Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher) won a tag team match

– Christopher Daniels defeated Rocky Romero

Daniels got a cheap win where he had his feet on the ropes while pinning Romero.

– Barrett Brown & Misterioso defeated The DKC & Kevin Knight, Shane Haste & Bad Dude Tito, and Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson in a four-way tag match

– Juice Robinson defeated Jake Something

– Homicide defeated “Filthy” Tom Lawlor

– Bullet Club (Chris Bey & El Phantasmo) defeated Mascara Dorada & Blake Christian

– Minoru Suzuki defeated Fred Yehi

– Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Gabriel Kidd

– Jay White defeated Fred Rosser

JR Kratos appeared after the match and made it known that he wants Rosser’s Strong Openweight Championship.

Eight matches official for NJPW Strong Showdown

NJPW has announced eight matches for the New Japan Showdown taping of Strong on October 16. 

Hiroshi Tanahashi will face Gabriel Kidd in singles competition at Showdown. Tanahashi had already been announced for the card, but his opponent had not been revealed. 

Minoru Suzuki will take on Fred Yehi at Showdown. Like Tanahashi, Suzuki’s appearance on the card had been announced previously, but his opponent has now been revealed. 

Former NJPW Strong Openweight Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor will be in action at Showdown, facing former ROH World Champion Homicide. 

Bullet Club’s Juice Robinson will face Jake Something at Showdown in another singles bout. 

In the lone tag team bout announced for the card to this point, Mascara Dorada and Blake Christian will team against Bullet Club’s El Phantasmo and Chris Bey. 

Three more singles matches round out the card, with Christopher Daniels vs. Rocky Romero, Kenny King vs. Che Cabrera, plus Peter Avalon vs. Keita Murray. 

Showdown will be taped at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles.

Here is the announced lineup: 

NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown, Sunday, October 16 —

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Gabriel Kidd
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Fred Yehi
  • Tom Lawlor vs. Homicide
  • Juice Robinson vs. Jake Something
  • Mascara Dorada & Blake Christian vs. El Phantasmo & Chris Bey
  • Christopher Daniels vs. Rocky Romero
  • Kenny King vs. Che Cabrera
  • Peter Avalon vs. Keita Murray

NJPW Strong results: TJP vs. Clark Connors

This week’s New Japan Strong kicked off the most recent set of tapings from The New Beginning USA tapings in Seattle at Washington Hall, the home of super indie DEFY Wrestling.

ROH’s Ian Riccaboni joined Alex Koslov on commentary. Riccaboni, who has also appeared for both Impact Wrestling and GCW recently, was filling in for Kevin Kelly, who was overseas doing English broadcasting in Japan.

If you’ve seen the 2019 NJPW Super J Cup, which was also filmed in Washington, tonight’s production quality and overall look was similar.

Brody King defeated Yuya Uemura

The two stood face to face in the ring before the bell, King almost a full head over Uemura. There were lots of chants for King before things got started.

This was a good opener. King was on the offensive throughout most of this. He squashed Uemura with a senton early, later putting Ueumura in a seated abdominal stretch and clubbing him in the chest with his free arm as he stretched him out. 

While Ueumura took a beating, he always wrestled with fire and attempted to come back. It was King who was just too much for the recently-graduated Young Lion.

Uemura would eventually connect with a string of moves to help him put King on the defensive. They traded big elbows, but Uemura landed a nice dropkick off the ropes soon after. He caught King with a running dropkick in the corner later and somehow put King down on the mat with a backdrop Saito suplex.

King answered back, locking Uemura in a bear hug and spiking him with a piledriver for two. Uemura slapped on a desperation armbar but King was close enough to the ropes to have the referee call for the break. He then put Uemura away with a big lariat and the Gonzo Bomb for the win.

King, who has been on a roll since last year, looked great, but so did Uemura who earned a chant of his own before he exited to the back.

Lio Rush & Rocky Romero defeated West Coast Wrecking Crew

The WCWC (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson) were regulars in the Seattle area for DEFY before they got to NJPW, where they wrestled under the name The One Percent. As a result, the crowd sounded familiar with them.

There was lots of action in this one. WCWC jumped Romero & Rush before the bell. Rush and Nelson fought on the floor while Isaacs worked Romero over in the ring. They did stereo delayed suplexes next, one in the ring and one on the floor. Nelson used a gourdbuster and dumped Rush face first to the mat while Isaacs dropped Romero with a suplex in the ring. WCWC then ran back into the ring to do some flexing and posing for the fans.

Romero later landed some hard chops on Isaacs and the crowd was loudly behind him. Isaacs kiboshed that and kept working him over while Nelson began tearing the red ringpost pad from the turnbuckle in the corner “Toru Yano style” as Riccaboni put it. 

Romero was finally able to swing out of Isaac’s grip with a tornado DDT and tag out to Rush. Isaacs tagged out Nelson, who caught a springboard moonsault from Rush upon entering the ring. Rush did an Asai moonsault to the floor onto Isaacs next and ran back into the ring for a flying frog crossbody attack (he did the froggy pump and a crossbody block, like Hiroshi Tanahashi does sometimes) onto Nelson. 

A proverbial “house of fire,” Rush was. This kid has so much in-ring talent alone that it’s kind of crazy he’s not in a top spot somewhere.

Nelson caught Rush with flying double knees in the corner and tagged out to Isaacs. Rush landed an enzuigiri on Isaacs and tagged out to Romero, who ran wild from corner to corner with Forever Clotheslines on both Isaacs and Nelson.

WCWC took Romero out soon after, using a running knee-to-German suplex double team spot on Romero for two. They did a cool double team slingshot-to-powerslam for another two. The match began breaking down. Rush dove onto the floor with a tope suicida as we hit the ten minute mark.

Romero caught Isaacs coming off the ropes with a flying armbar, transitioning to a triangle choke and finally to an armbar on the opposite side. He grabbed Isaacs’ left leg for more leverage and pressure, which got Isaacs to ultimately tap out. This match had really good stuff from everyone involved.

WCWC beat up Romero after the match with a black kendo stick—a message from Black Tiger and Team Filthy to Romero, who has been feuding with the new Black Tiger since early in the year. Isaacs looked to the camera and told Black Tiger they had his back.

Romero and the new Black Tiger will finally have a singles match at the upcoming NJPW Strong: Rivals tapings this month.

— Riccaboni interviewed David Finlay and Juice Robinson. FinJuice were pissed and called out JONAH and Bad Dude Tito for sticking their noses in their business. Finlay and Robinson usually come off happy-go-lucky babyfaces, but this promo had an edge to it for sure. 

The promo was short and to the point, covering all that’s happened between the four within the past month like when JONAH and Tito jumped Robinson after JONAH’s singles match against him at NJPW Strong: Nemesis. These two teams will also square off at NJPW Strong: Rivals this month.

Clark Connors defeated TJP

NJPW Strong has been slow cooking this mentor vs. mentee rivalry over the past two years or so. A video package broke down all the different stops along the way, starting with the aforementioned Super J-Cup 2019 all the way through Showdown 2021.

Connors, who comes from the Pacific Northwest, got a great reception before the match started. He slammed TJP into the corner and took his knee tape off. It’s business time. Connors next walked back to the corner and chopped the hell out of TJP, who was still reeling. He launched him with two very high angle German suplexes and went for a third before TJP escaped to the floor. Connors ran after him and pounced TJP over the guardrail onto the ring announcer’s table. This was great but also would have looked better if the lighting wasn’t so dark.

TJP locked Connors in a guillotine choke inside the ropes, his back facing the audience. He then planted him with a high back suplex with one grapevined leg for a two count. He put Connors in a chinlock for a while and the crowd got loud in support of Connors. TJP face washed him in the corner and I liked how Riccaboni said, “I don’t agree with this move” which is such an accurate take on the spot. It’s not illegal, yet there’s nothing sportsmanlike about it. Heavy boos rained down onto TJP.

Connors was able to gather up a burst of energy to catch TJP running off the ropes with a flying shoulder block. He dropped an elbow on to his former mentor just after the ten minute call sounded.

TJP tried springboarding off the ropes, but Connors caught him mid-air with a spear. Both were out for a while. TJP was back up first and gave Connors more disrespectful face washes as he pointed to those booing him in the crowd. He locked Connors in an armbar next, but Connors reversed it into a Mr. Gannosuke-style full nelson clutch. TJP escaped after grabbing the ropes for a break.

When TJP tried escaping to the floor again, Connors caught him with a spear while he was still on the apron which got the crowd to chant “this is awesome.”

Connors tried suplexing TJP back into the ring, but TJP countered and locked Connors in a triangle choke in the ropes. He let go and then dashed to the top rope to drop a flying knee across the back of Connors, who was still caught in the ropes. TJP then rolled Connors to the center and hit his Mamba Splash finisher for a really close two count. The crowd was steaming hot at this point.

TJP then hit a crazy looking cobra twist driver, but Connors kicked out at one. He landed a fireman’s carry-to-gamengiri kick but again, Connors kicked out after the count of one. If this were a video game, his spirit level would have been flashing like crazy at this moment. 

TJP did a backslide followed by a modified scorpion deathlock, wrenching on Connors’ injured knee. Connors caught the ropes for a break and then rolled TJP up for two. They then knocked each other down after a double lariat. Referee Jeremy Marcus shouted at both to get back up. When both were, TJP went for a tornado DDT but Connors instead just launched the guy forward and he went flying, landing face first onto the mat. Connors climbed to the top but TJP stopped him, again wrenching on Connors’ injured shoulder.

Moments later, Connors connected with a Mamba Splash of his own. Connors flashed the LA Dojo sign at TJP, which the crowd enjoyed, and then used a big stacked power bomb on him for two. TJP flipped Connors off and Connors powerslammed him. Then, he put his former mentor TJP away with Catch and Kill, a backdrop suplex-to-power bomb, for the emphatic win in 18:19.

This was excellent and Connors’ best match on NJPW Strong of all time, and possibly even the best match of his career so far.

Final thoughts:

This show had a big time feel and delivered with three very good-to-great matches. Each is worth going out of your way to see, and each had a different flavor than the other. King vs. Uemura was a killer hard-hitting opener while the West Coast Wrecking Crew vs. Rush & Romero was top-tier tag team wrestling. 

The main event wasn’t just Connors’ best match on the show but possibly also TJP’s as well. Actually, I can’t think of too many better TJP matches in the past few years than this one. Good on both of them for this ripper of a match.

NJPW Strong results: Moxley & Kingston vs. Suzuki & Archer

This was the next installment of New Japan Showdown tapings from 2300 Arena f.k.a. the ECW Arena in Philadelphia.

Alex Coughlin Challenge Match Series: Jonathan Gresham defeated Alex Coughlin

New Japan’s “Challenge Match Series” is usually a pre-graduation routine, a series of matches where rookie Young Lions take on top talent. This happens right before they transition to a higher position on the card and get new tights and/or a gimmick. Alex Coughlin looks to be the next graduate from the LA Dojo, and his first match was against ROH’s Jonathan Gresham.

Gresham’s last appearances with NJPW were at the 2019 Super J-Cup tournament shows, pre-pandemic. 

They shook hands before the bout. The two traded headlock takeovers. They got tied up in the corner, both tangled up in a collar-and-elbow, and neither wanted to be first to break. This led to some chippiness between the two. They bumped chests. Coughlin shoved Gresham, but the veteran Gresham quickly had rookie Coughlin back on the mat with another headlock takeover.

What’s so great about Gresham is how he injects life into fundamental chain wrestling. He’s never boring, yet he’s not reinventing the wheel in terms of creativity. He’s just that damn good. So much of this match was built on a headlock takeover, and it worked.

Coughlin hung right in there, too. He’s bigger than Gresham, but since Gresham wrestled the smarter, craftier style, thus neutralizing any size advantage Coughlin had. Coughlin escaped eventually and locked in a headscissors hold. When Gresham attempted to bridge out of the headscissors, was able to clasp his hands around Gresham’s waist and deadlift him onto his shoulder—from a seated position, mind you. He threw Gresham to the mat with a gutwrench suplex.

They traded lots of close nearfalls. After exchanging a number of sunset flips and inside cradles, Gresham caught Coughlin with a headscissors pin for the win. This was mid-sequence, too, meaning most of the audience didn’t see it coming. I sure didn’t. It was a nice spin on the headlock takeover-to-headscissors spot we’ve seen in pro wrestling ad nauseam over the years, plus it was a loss that doesn’t take anything away from Coughlin while also enhancing Gresham’s “best pure wrestler in the world” gimmick. This was excellent.

Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Ren Narita, Rocky Romero & the DKC defeated Team Filthy (Danny Limelight, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs & Tom Lawlor) via disqualification

The babyface team stormed the ring and went after Team Filthy before the bell even rang. Rosser’s head was shaved as a result of Lawlor shaving Rosser’s head after a match a few weeks ago, with Lawlor eating his hair. Filthy.

Rosser immediately began biting Lawlor while the rest of the match spilled out onto the floor. Rosser and Lawlor threw wild punches at each other, in and out of the corner. Rosser took off his shirt and choked Lawlor with it, then blew snot-rockets at him. Great energy from everyone here, but particularly Rosser, who was fired-the-hell up. JR Kratos put the kibosh on this after he ambushed Rosser, taking him out with a huge jumping lariat. 

Lawlor pounced on top of the fallen Rosser and began strangling him. This is an especially great spot since we know Lawlor is a BJJ black belt and he’s choosing to strangle Rosser with two hands like an angry guy in a bar fight. The rest of Team Filthy came back into the ring and posed over Rosser until the rest of the babyfaces broke things up.

Team Filthy continued to work Rosser over. The West Coast Wrecking Crew and Danny Limelight used a 3-on-1 offense to keep Rosser down. They fed Rosser to Kratos who was waiting for Rosser on the floor. When Kratos went to deadlift suplex Rosser, “Mr. No Days Off ” slipped out and shoved Kratos into the ring post. WCWC came at him from the opposite side, but Rosser took both out with a double-lariat. Danny Limelight darted in, but Rosser launched him into the air, back body dropping him onto Kratos, who was still recovering on the floor. Rosser’s proverbial spirit bar was flashing at this point. He drilled Lawlor with a gutbuster on the floor, though I’m not sure who that would’ve hurt worse, him or Lawlor.

Ren Narita and Royce Isaacs were in together next. Narita scored a two-count with a beautiful single-arm suplex. Narita might have the best bridge in the business right now. Jorel Nelson broke up the pin. The DKC jumped in next and unleashed some kiai power onto Isaacs, chopping him up in the corner before whipping him to Narita for a release front suplex. DKC and Karl Fredericks showed off nice double-team work.

Isaacs, the legal man for Team Filthy, caught Fredericks with a pop-up kneelift, then tagged out to Limelight. Fredericks planted Limelight with a spinebuster after Limelight was doing the cha-cha. Romero tagged in next and he and Limelight then got into it.

Later, Lawlor and Rosser brawled again in the ring, doing their own rendition of the Frye-Takayama endless punches spot.

Limelight almost landed his patented double-jump swinging DDT, but Romero cut him off and turned it into a falcon arrow-to-armbar submission attempt. The match ended when a masked and hooded wrestler entered the ring and began hitting Romero with a black kendo stick.

The wrestler then removed his hoodie and was revealed to be the new Black Tiger, or as Alex Koslov called him on commentary, “the Black Tiger Mask.” Black Tiger laid Romero out with a tombstone piledriver. He appears to be aligned with Team Filthy.

Tiger, Lawlor and Kratos beat on Rosser in the ring. The crowd chanted “F*CK YOU KRATOS,” then “SHUT THE F*CK UP” at Tom Lawlor when he got on the mic.

“I’m sick and damn tired of Rocky Romero gettin’ his ass off SoundCloud and into the ring! I’m so sick of hearing about how far Darren has come in the past few years!” Lawlor went on to explain that the new Black Tiger hadn’t come back to haunt him, but to end him. He’d then put his foot across Rosser’s neck. The crowd started chanting “FRED,” a retort to Lawlor’s “Darrren (Young)” comment earlier.

In the post-match promo backstage, Lawlor explained that he believed Rocky Romero had been with NJPW for 20 years and was abusing his power. He accused Romero of trying to “hold everybody down” and that he was sick of it. He said Team Filthy deserves all of the top spots in Japan. Lawlor called out “Darren” (Fred Rosser) for threatening to come to his house and beat him up. He said Rosser wasn’t man enough to ever do something like that.

By the end of this promo, it felt like it turned into an old-school Survivor Series team interview, with most of Team Filthy eyeballing the camera while Lawlor cut his promo on Rosser.

After a break, we saw NJPW Young Lion Gabriel Kidd make his post-pandemic return. Kidd was previously based out of Japan and had a number of awesome matches with Yota Tsuji, Ren Narita and Yuya Uemura (among others) over the past few years.

Kidd got on the mic and said he would be at New Japan’s Detonation show in Riverside, CA. He said that he saw fellow Young Lion Alex Coughlin’s match with Jonathan Gresham earlier in the night and that he liked it very much. He called Gresham out to the ring next and implied he wanted a match with him in Riverside at Detonation.

Gresham came to the ring. Before handing him the mic, Kidd explained how much respect he had for Gresham and what he’d done for wrestling, but that if he thought he could ever out-wrestle a British wrestler, he’d be mistaken.

Gresham explained that he didn’t even know who Kidd was, but that it wasn’t a knock, it was just that Gresham hadn’t been paying attention to NJPW recently. He said that he was impressed with Kidd’s training partner, Alex Coughlin, and that he was sure Kidd was at least as good or better than Coughlin, and that he’d gladly accept his challenge for a match in California. The two would shake hands and Gresham would then exit the ring.

Before the segment ended, Kidd grabbed the mic once more and told the crowd that if they were going through hard times these days to not give up, to keep steppin’ and to speak up, because no one is alone.

Daniel Garcia & Violence Unlimited (Brody King & Chris Dickinson) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso)

This was a fun but relatively short match that the crowd loved. Dickinson and Brown mixed it up first. Brown went toe-to-toe with Dickinson, but the bigger “Dirty Daddy” stamped him out with a hard shoulder block before he tagged young phenom Daniel Garcia in for some double-team offense. Brody King and Misterioso got into it later. The crowd loved King.

Garcia systematically tore through the Stray Dog Army. He, King, and Dickinson locked all three Stray Dogs in simultaneous submission holds.

Bateman used a Northern Lights bomb variation on King to lay him out. Dickinson and Garcia were able to save King from the Stray Dog 3-on-1 attack. King would then power bomb Barrett Brown onto the rest of the wrestlers on the floor, Mike Awesome-style. Violence Unlimited and Garcia put the Stray Dog Army away with tandem piledrivers (plus one Gonzo Bomb from King, the legal man).

Philadelphia Street Fight: Suzuki-gun (Lance Archer & Minoru Suzuki) defeat Eddie Kingston & Jon Moxley

This was taped before Jon Moxley’s hiatus.

Before the match, they aired a production package made up of mostly past AEW footage of the four wrestlers going at it on a past episode of Dynamite.

Archer came out first and took out a few Young Lions standing ringside. Vintage Archer. The crowd went wild for “Kaze Ni Nare” as usual.

Retired NJPW referee Tiger Hattori joined Matt Rehwoldt and Alex Koslov on commentary 

When Moxley and Kingston were in the ring with Suzuki-gun before the bell, Suzuki and Mox began poking and shoving each other.

Suzuki knocked Kingston out cold with a forearm shot. Suzuki terrorized with a kendo stick. Hattori said on commentary that Suzuki has a lot of experience doing kendo.

The fight spilled to the backstage area, and then the backlot. I got deja vu as all four brawled into the parking lot area, which ECW fans have seen a number of times over the years in famous promos and matches. Archer did the 1996 Kevin Nash–Rey Mysterio lawn-dart-into-side-of-truck spot to Mox. Suzuki choked Moxley with the top part of a folding chair.

Something may have happened inside the arena at this point in the match. People started booing just as Eddie Kingston threw a cinderblock at Archer but missed. Rehwoldt mentioned the inside feed may have cut out. Not entirely sure what was happening inside the venue, but the match quickly moved back inside the arena.

Suzuki brought a traffic cone into the venue, hitting Kingston over the head with it. Then, he whacked Kingston a couple times with a kendo stick and bowed, then respectfully placed the stick near the announcers table.

Archer strangled Kingston with a dustpan. He and Suzuki beat on Kingston inside the ring, this time with kendo sticks. Suzuki wound up and swung like a baseball player, then placed the stick under Kingston’s arm for an armbar with the extra kendo stick leverage.

Mox reappeared and came with an unhinged door in hand. The crowd started chanting “E-C-W!” though I can’t recall a time when someone in ECW ever used a door. Mox grabbed someone’s sign because someone had written “MOX USE MY SIGN!” on it. He ripped off the paper and revealed the object to be a stop sign. I wonder how the fan got a hold of that.

Moxley slid the door into the ring and would eventually dropkick Archer through it as it was set up against the turnbuckle. The crowd chanted “this is awesome.”

Archer would later level Kingston with a full nelson slam, but Kingston powered up and landed two urakens and a DDT for two—Suzuki made a last minute save. He put Kingston in a guillotine choke. Suzuki went for the Gotch-Style piledriver but Mox broke it up. Finally, Suzuki-gun put the match away after Archer pinned Kingston with a Blackout onto a garbage can.

Afterwards, Archer grabbed a mic and ordered a cameraman onto the apron. He then told Kingston that he was sick of Kingston screwing him out of matches and titles. He said this was for disrespecting Suzuki-gun. He’d then talk about his then-upcoming match with Kingston as part of AEW’s World Title Eliminator tournament. Suzuki threw the mic at Kingston and said “We are Suzuki-gun!” before leaving ringside.

Kingston grabbed the mic and said something too, but it was garbled because NJPW bleeped a word and you couldn’t hear the end of what he said because it was so short. So, Eddie Kingston said something. And it was probably vulgar, as you’d expect.

Final thoughts:

This was a top-tier edition of NJPW Strong. The opener between Coughlin and Gresham was an excellent opener; the tag matches in between had tons of fire and the Rosser vs. Lawlor angle for the Openweight title has been arguably the best long-term angle in the show’s short history; the main event was a hell of a main event brawl with more grit and grime than the AEW version.

From quality to action to star power, this show had a bit of everything for everyone, especially if you like your wrestling to be a little more rough-and-tumble than the usual.

Moxley & Kingston vs. Suzuki & Archer set for NJPW Strong

Four matches have been announced this week’s NJPW Strong. The episode will be the finale of the New Japan Showdown series of episodes. 

In the main event, Jon Moxley and Eddie Kingston will face Minoru Suzuki and Lance Archer in a street fight. 

In the semi-main, Brody King, Chris Dickinson and Daniel Garcia will take on Barrett Brown, Bateman and Misterioso in a trios bout. 

Also set for this week’s episode, Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson and Danny Limelight will face Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita and The DKC in a ten-man tag. 

In the opener, Jonathan Gresham will take on Alex Coughlin.

The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.

Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing. 

Here is Saturday’s full lineup:

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night four, Saturday, November 27, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–

  • Philadelphia street fight: Jon Moxley & Eddie Kingston vs. Minoru Suzuki & Lance Archer
  • Brody King, Chris Dickinson & Daniel Garcia vs. Barrett Brown, Bateman & Misterioso
  • Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson & Danny Limelight vs. Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita & The DKC
  • Jonathan Gresham vs. Alex Coughlin

TJP vs. Clark Connors to headline NJPW Strong

A singles match headlines this week’s NJPW Strong. 

United Empire’s TJP will face Clark Connors in the show’s main event. The two have split their previous singles meetings 1-1. 

Lio Rush will tag with Ariya Daivari in the second match on Strong. They will face the Bullet Club duo of El Phantasmo and Impact Wrestling’s Chris Bey. 

In the opener, David Finlay and Juice Robinson will take on Yuya Uemura and LA Dojo’s Kevin Knight.

The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.

Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing. 

Here is Saturday’s full lineup:

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night three, Saturday, November 20, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–

  • TJP vs. Clark Connors
  • Lio Rush & Ariya Daivari vs. El Phantasmo & Chris Bey
  • David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. Yuya Uemura & Kevin Knight

NJPW Strong results: Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson

Saturday’s episode was the second installment in the New Japan Showdown series from Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena.

Alex Zayne defeated Ariya Daivari

For the first time since last year, Zayne returned to NJPW after a cup of coffee in the WWE system. This was Daivari’s NJPW debut after a couple years on WWE 205 Live.

Zayne’s offense was creative with the announcers putting over how innovative he was during the match. He did a springboard double knee drop and standing corkscrew moonsault early. Daivari answered with a low dropkick to Zayne’s head and later, a guiltillione legdrop to Zayne while he was draped across the middle rope. The crowd was pretty into Zayne. He did a turnaround springboard moonsault from the inside of the ring to the floor onto Daivari, followed by a somersault headscissors to Daivari while he was seated on the top rope.

Later, Daivari, who had brought a Persian rug with him to the ring, went for the Magic Carpet Ride (basically a top rope splash while holding the carpet), but he missed. Zayne put Daivari away with the Taco Driver for the win. Afterward, Daivari reluctantly shook hands with Zayne which the crowd liked.

Daivari cut an interesting promo backstage afterward. He said that his NJPW debut didn’t go as well as it wanted it to, but Zayne earned his respect. He went on to explain that the NJPW roster backstage gave him a weird impression because he came from “over there” (meaning WWE), implying that he wasn’t trustworthy and might be a guy who’d use underhanded tactics in the NJPW ring.

He explained that the reason he would win matches using illegal chair shots in the past was because he was a product of his surroundings and that his past playing field was more like the wild west, so he did what he had to do to survive. He wants to change and admitted that even though it may not happen overnight, him being in NJPW might elicit that change in him. Basically, he wants to be a more ethical or upstanding wrestler more so than during his time in WWE.

Rocky Romero and Fred Rosser defeated Team Filthy (New Japan Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor and Danny Limelight)

Limelight and former mentor Romero kicked things off, but “Filthy” Tom found his way into the match not so long after. He and Limelight double teamed Romero for a while in their corner. Rosser stormed into the ring to try and cut off Team Filthy’s relentless double team effort even though he wasn’t the legal man. Lawlor and Limelight made him pay and began double teaming him, too, before getting him out of the ring, rolling him to the floor.

Lawlor worked over Romero’s legs and slapped on an achilles lock variation before Rosser again stormed the ring to break up the submission. He pancaked Lawlor with an earthquake splash and went back to his corner to wait for Romero to tag him in. Rosser’s fire is infectious. Romero finally tagged him in and Rosser cleaned house. At around the ten minute mark, Rosser went for a crucifix bomb but Limelight countered into a sunset flip for a close two count.

Toward the end, Rosser tried hitting the gutbuster on both Limelight and Lawlor but he couldn’t quite swing it. Romero came into the ring to make the save, taking Limelight out with Sliced Bread and then a dive to the floor. Rosser finally hit the gutbuster on Lawlor and then caught him with a single leg dropkick for a close count of two.

On their feet, Lawlor was able to counter Rosser’s momentum by dropping him neck first across the top rope with a stun gun. He then locked Rosser in a sleeper, but Rosser used his momentum and weight to fall backward and pin Lawlor, who still hadn’t let go of the sleeper. Lawlor’s shoulders were down and the ref counted three, giving Rosser the win for his team and a pin on the Strong Openweight champion to boot.

Lawlor complained to the ref about the finish and then he and Limelight attacked Rosser despite the match being over. The decision was final.

The rest of Team Filthy (West Coast Wrecking Crew and JR Kratos) came out and continued putting the boots to both Rosser and Romero. Limelight grabbed a pair of scissors from a toolbox that was under the ring and he and Lawlor proceeded to cut Rosser’s hair as a way of humiliating him after the win. Lawlor lived up to his nickname and chewed some of Rosser’s hair as he taunted the crowd. Filthy, indeed. Despite winning, Rosser looked defeated when he was finally able to walk to the back.

NEVER Openweight Champion Jay White defeated Fred Yehi in a non-title match

The recently retired Tiger Hattori joined Matt Rehwoldt and Alex Koslov on English commentary for this match. Hattori is a NJPW legend who spent decades refereeing big matches for New Japan and other Japanese wrestling companies.

White got a babyface reception despite being marketed as one of NJPW’s top heels. He too sweeted a number of fans on his way to the ring. Even Hattori got one.

Earlier this year on NJPW Strong, White scored a win over Yehi’s tag team partner, Wheeler Yuta, so the story was that Yehi tried avenging Yuta’s loss here. He locked on his Koji clutch finisher submission early. White rolled to the floor to collect himself and slid back into the ring and started stomping away at Yehi, catching him off guard. They traded hard chops. When Yehi looked like he might be getting the upper hand, White resorted to cheap shot kicks and eye gouging to keep the proverbial ball in his court.

Yehi started working over White’s arm, but White put the kibosh on that quickly and threw him to the floor. Yehi made another comeback later, this time with the crowd squarely behind him, launching White with an overhead suplex and then chopping him up in the corner. He locked White in an abdominal stretch, but White eye gouged his way out of the hold, dropping Yehi with a DDT.

White scored a two count after a Blade Buster, but Yehi answered back with a German suplex and brain buster before again locking in the Koji clutch, but White made it to the ropes for a break. Soon after, White spiked Yehi with a sleeper suplex and the Blade Runner to put Yehi away. This was really good.

Afterward, White got on the microphone and talked about the success of his recent “U.S. of Jay” tour where he appeared on Impact and wrestled people from AEW and ROH. He mentioned Yuta, Daniel Garcia and now Yehi. He said when people get in the ring with him, their star level goes up. White then laid out an open challenge to anyone from any company to face him, but before he could do that, the NEVER Openweight Champion explained he would have to first take care of Tomohiro Ishii in San Jose at Battle in the Valley.

Minoru Suzuki defeated Chris Dickinson

The crowd was amped up for this. These two had an excellent bout at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport in Los Angeles last month, available to stream on NJPW World now. The main difference between tonight’s match and their Bloodsport bout was the intensity or build from the beginning to the end. The Bloodsport match was more brutal from the get-go while this one was violent but also more fan-friendly with the ref spots and brawling around the ring.

Dickinson worked on Suzuki’s legs early on. Suzuki countered with ease and began working over Dickinson’s legs next. When they were on their feet, they traded hard chops. The younger Dickinson got the better of the exchange, chopping him into the corner, but Suzuki trapped him in the corner by locking him in a hanging cross armbreaker over the ropes.

The fight spilled to the floor next. Suzuki found a chair under the ring, but referee Jeremy Marcus took it away. The began crowd started chanting “F*ck you, ref!” Suzuki attempted taking his anger out on Rehwoldt and kicked the commentary booth. Rehwoldt said it was the scariest moment of his life.

In the ring, Suzuki teased chopping Marcus in the corner for taking the chair away, but then he smiled and backed off. The crowd was all in on Marcus getting decimated by Suzuki. Dickinson tried working Suzuki’s legs over again, but Suzuki was able to counter into another armbar. Suzuki used a number of penalty kicks on Dickinson, who was seated. Dickinson ate all of them and even laughed at some. He caught Suzuki’s last PK and stood up.

They were trading even more chops when the 15-minute call sounded. Dickinson stuck Suzuki with a brain buster for two. Suzuki was able to power up and lock Dickinson in a sleeperhold. Dickinson powered out and connected with an enzuigiri kick. Suzuki answered back with elbows and, finally, his patented Gotch-style piledriver for the win in an excellent match.

“Jon Moxley. Eddie Kingston. F*CK YOU!,” Suzuki called out after the match. He said Lance Archer would be in the building tomorrow for their Philly street fight rematch and then said “Suzuki-gun, ICHIBAN!” before leaving the ring. He went after Hattori at ringside before exiting.

Final thoughts:

This felt like a big episode of NJPW Strong. Maybe the biggest. It also may have been the longest episode in the show’s short history, too, clocking in at 1:40 minutes in total. All of tonight’s matches tied into what would happen at Battle in the Valley in San Jose which aired on FITE and NJPW World.

White and Yehi’s match is worth checking out as it was probably Yehi’s best match on the show so far. Suzuki and Dickinson also had a fun match that was a good complement to their Bloodsport fight last month. They are great rivals. Hopefully, these two will have another chance to square off once more and, hopefully, it will be in Japan when it does.

Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson set for NJPW Strong

A pair of singles matches headline this week’s NJPW Strong. 

In the main event, Minoru Suzuki will take on Chris Dickinson. 

In the semi-main, NEVER Openweight Champion Jay White faces Fred Yehi in a non-title match. 

NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor will team with Danny Limelight against top contender to Lawlor’s title Fred Rosser and Rocky Romero. 

In the opener, Ariya Daivari will face Alex Zayne. 

The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.

Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing. 

Here is Saturday’s full lineup:

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night two, Saturday, November 13, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–

  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson
  • Jay White vs. Fred Yehi
  • Tom Lawlor & Danny Limelight vs. Fred Rosser & Rocky Romero
  • Ariya Daivari vs. Alex Zayne

Ospreay & TJP vs. Fredericks & Connors to headline NJPW Strong

A tag team match will headline this week’s New Japan Showdown episode of NJPW Strong.

In the main event, Will Ospreay and TJP of The United Empire will tag against NJPW LA Dojo graduates Karl Fredericks and Clark Connors. 

In the semi-main, Juice Robinson will be in singles competition against Bullet Club’s El Phantasmo. 

In the opener, Robinson’s FinJuice tag partner David Finlay will team with Alex Coughlin and Yuya Uemura against Team Filthy’s JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs and Jorel Nelson.

The New Japan Showdown episodes of Strong were taped on October 16 and October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at the 2300 Arena.

Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time this Saturday on NJPW World. The show will also be available on demand immediately following airing. 

Here is Saturday’s full lineup:

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night one, Saturday, November 6, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–

  • Will Ospreay & TJP vs. Karl Fredericks & Clark Connors
  • Juice Robinson vs. El Phantasmo
  • David Finlay, Alex Coughlin & Yuya Uemura vs. JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson

NJPW Strong spoilers: Moxley & Kingston vs. Suzuki & Archer

NJPW held their second night of Strong Showdown tapings on Sunday at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia. 

Below are night two’s results. 

*Thanks to Travis Larrabee*

**********

Juice Robinson & David Finlay defeated Yuya Uemura & Kevin Knight

Finlay pinned Knight after a top rope elbow. 

El Phantasmo & Chris Bey defeated Lio Rush & Ariya Daivari 

Bey pinned Daivari after a knee strike. 

Jonathan Gresham defeated Alex Coughlin

Gresham won by pinfall with a roll-up.

Fred Rosser, Karl Fredericks, Rocky Romero, Ren Narita & The DKC defeated Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson & Danny Limelight

Rosser and company won by DQ after someone dressed as Black Tiger attacked Romero. 

Rosser will be Lawlor’s next challenger for the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship.

Brody King, Chris Dickinson & Daniel Garcia defeated Bateman, Misterioso & Barrett Brown

King pinned Misterioso with a Gonzo Bomb. 

Gabriel Kidd returned

Kidd returned and challenged Gresham to a match at the next Strong tapings in Riverside. 

TJP defeated Clark Connors

TJP won by pinfall with a roll-up with his feet on the ropes. 

Jay White & Hikuleo defeated Fred Yehi & Wheeler Yuta

White pinned Yuta after a Blade Runner.

Will Ospreay defeated Alex Zayne

Ospreay pinned Zayne after a Hidden Blade.

Philadelphia street fight: Minoru Suzuki & Lance Archer defeated Jon Moxley & Eddie Kingston

Archer pinned Kingston after hitting Blackout through a table.  

Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson announced for NJPW Showdown

NJPW has announced the first two matches of next month’s NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown tapings in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena. 

On night one on Saturday, October 16, Minoru Suzuki will take on NJPW Strong regular and former Team Filthy member “The Dirty Daddy” Chris Dickinson. 

On night two on Sunday, October 17, Will Ospreay will face Alex Zayne. Zayne is coming off a short WWE run, where he wrestled as Ari Sterling. Aside from one appearance on NXT, Zayne’s entire WWE stint was confined to 205 Live. Zayne’s original WWE signing was officially announced with the December 2020 Performance Center class. He was released by WWE on August 6, 2021. 

Tickets for both nights of NJPW action in Philadelphia are on sale now.

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night one, Saturday, October 16 —

  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Chris Dickinson

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown night two, Sunday, October 17 —

  • Will Ospreay vs. Alex Zayne

Former NXT wrestlers, Gresham, Bey set for Philly NJPW Strong tapings

NJPW has announced four additions to the talent lineup for October’s New Japan Strong tapings.

Jake Atlas, Alex Zayne, Jonathan Gresham, and Chris Bey have been added to next month’s New Japan Showdown tapings in Philadelphia. The tapings are being held at the 2300 Arena on Saturday, October 16 and Sunday, October 17.

Atlas and Zayne were both released by WWE during last month’s NXT roster cuts. Zayne used the name Ari Sterling in WWE.

Atlas will be making his NJPW debut at the New Japan Showdown tapings, while Zayne had been part of NJPW Strong prior to signing with WWE.

Gresham is the current ROH Pure Champion. Bey is part of the Impact Wrestling roster and is a former X-Division Champion. Bey will also be appearing at this month’s NJPW Strong tapings in Garland, Texas.

Here are the wrestlers that have been announced for the October tapings in Philadelphia:

  • Jay White
  • Will Ospreay
  • Minoru Suzuki
  • Lance Archer
  • El Phantasmo
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Brody King
  • Chris Dickinson
  • Hikuleo
  • Fred Rosser
  • TJP
  • Lio Rush
  • Clark Connors
  • Karl Fredericks
  • Jake Atlas
  • Alex Zayne
  • Jonathan Gresham
  • Chris Bey

NJPW Strong events announced for Texas and Pennsylvania

NJPW has announced a series of tapings for Strong to be held in the United States in September and October. 

Strong will be taped on Saturday, September 25 and Sunday, September 26 in Garland Texas, as well as Saturday, October 16 and Sunday, October 17 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

The Texas tapings will be held at the Curtis Cullwell Center, while the Philadelphia events will take place at the 2300 Arena. 

The Garland shows will be branded as Autumn Attack, while the Philadelphia cards will be presented as New Japan Showdown 2021. 

No matches have been announced for the events, but a list of talent appearing has been released and can be seen below. 

Tickets for both events will go on sale on Sunday, August 8 at noon Eastern time. Prices will range from $29-$149. Ticket bundles with a merchandise gift will also be available.

NJPW Strong will also be taped in Long Beach, California on August 16. Hiroshi Tanahashi and Tomohiro Ishii have been announced for that sold out event. 

Here is the lineup for Garland: 

NJPW Strong Autumn Attack, Saturday, September 25, Sunday, September 26, Curtis Culwell Center, Garland, Texas —

  • Jay White
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • Hikuleo
  • Lio Rush
  • Fred Rosser
  • Brody King
  • Chris Dickinson
  • Karl Fredericks

Here is the lineup for Philadelphia: 

NJPW Strong New Japan Showdown 2021, Saturday, October 16, Sunday, October 17, 2300 Arena, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania —

  • Jay White
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • TJP
  • Lio Rush
  • Fred Rosser
  • Clark Connors
  • Karl Fredericks
  • Ren Narita