Filthy Four Daily: Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor talk Smackdown and New Japan Strong!

Filthy Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about in our weekly look at Smackdown and New Japan Strong! Lots of great matches, including the Smackdown main event, and since it’s Valentine’s Day we have a special surprise at the end. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Wrestling Observer Live: Smackdown, Rampage, Dynamite ratings, Rocky Romero interview!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is back with tons to talk about including Rampage and Smackdown line-ups, AEW Dynamite ratings, tons of news notes and feedback and more, then Rocky Romero joins us to talk New Japan Pro Wrestling and Rampage! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Filthy Four Daily: Bryan and Tom Lawlor talk Stardom PPV, Smackdown, NJPW Strong

Figure Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including full reviews of the Stardom PPV this weekend, New Japan Strong on NJPWWorld.com, and Smackdown on Friday, the go-home show for Royal Rumble. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Filthy Four Daily: Strong tapings, Strong TV and Smackdown!

Filthy Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including some notes from the Strong tapings in Seattle, a very fun episode of Strong on New Japan World this week, Smackdown Sports Entertainment, and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Bryan & Vinny & Craig Show: AEW Rampage plus New Japan Strong tapings in Seattle!

The Bryan & Vinny Show is back with tons to talk about including TWO GREAT SHOWS, the AEW Rampage show from Friday night and the New Japan Strong TV tapings on Saturday night in Seattle, an absolutely awesome live show that you’ll be able to watch soon on New Japan Strong. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Josh Barnett, Jonah, FinJuice added to NJPW New Beginning USA

Four new matches were added to the January 15th NJPW New Beginning USA event in Seattle, Washington, that will include Josh Barnett, Lio Rush, Jonah, FinJuice and more.

Barnett, a Seattle native, will take on Ren Narita for the first time ever. The former UFC heavyweight champion and former New Japan U.S. color commentator returned to a New Japan ring for the first time since 2004 at November’s Detonation in a win over Alex Coughlin. He hasn’t done any in-ring wrestling since 2019 outside his Bloodsport events for GCW and one indie appearance.

Narita is coming off a singles loss to Will Ospreay at November’s Battle in the Valley and a November trios loss on Strong.

Three tag team matches were also announced as FinJuice (David Finlay and Juice Robinson) will take on Jonah and Bad Dude Tito; Rocky Romero and Lio Rush will battle Royce Isaacs and Jorel Nelson, while Kevin Knight and The DKC will face Ricky Gibson and Eddie Pearl.

This will be the promotional debuts for Tito, Gibson and Pearl.

Here’s the current card:

  • Jay White “U.S. of Jay” open challenge
  • Matthew Rehwoldt vs. El Phantasmo
  • Clark Connors vs. TJP
  • Brody King vs. Yuya Uemura
  • Josh Barnett vs. Ren Narita
  • FinJuice vs. Jonah and Bad Dude Tito
  • Rocky Romero and Lio Rush vs. Royce Isaacs and Jorel Nelson
  • Kevin Knight and The DKC vs. Ricky Gibson and Eddie Pearl

NJPW Strong results: White & Hikuleo vs. Zayne & Ueumura

This week’s New Japan Strong was from their Detonation show in Riverside, CA, and had a different look in terms of production. The camera setup was similar to what they did for Battle in the Valley last month. While the crowd was relatively small, the hard cam’s angled downshot made them look bigger on screen. I thought it looked good.

Lio Rush and Adrian Quest defeated Stray Dog Army (Bateman and Misterioso)

Bateman and Quest went at it first and the crowd really responded to Quest’s offense. It’s amazing how much having a live audience alters the vibe.

Rush and Quest did tandem tope suicidas to the floor. Misterioso later turned Quest inside out with a lariat. Stray Dog Army began taking control of the match from there with Misteriso and Bateman double-teaming Quest for a few minutes.

When Misteriso went for a Lionsault, Quest got his knees up just in time to take out “Big Papi Pump.” He then used an impressive reverse frankensteiner and tagged out to Rush, who was also super over with this crowd. He made Bateman chase him around the ring and then caught him with a springboard elbow. He earned a two count after hitting Bateman with a falcon arrow.

Rush took Misterioso out with his patented springboard cutter and then Bateman on the floor with an Asai moonsault from the bottom rope. Back in the ring, Quest landed a Phoenix splash for the win. The crowd sounded like they loved this, especially Rush and Quest for whom it may have been his best match in the show’s history.

Alex Coughlin Challenge Match Series: Josh Barnett defeated Alex Coughlin via submission

If you’re not familiar with “The Warmaster,” he is a former UFC heavyweight champion and former Pancrase openweight champion. He headlined the Tokyo Dome with Yuji Nagata in 2004, was on the NJPW commentary team when the company aired on AXS TV, and that’s not really even scratching the surface of his accomplishments.

After 17 years away, the modern-day Karl Gotch returned to a NJPW ring to take part in Coughlin’s Challenge Match series. Barnett has actually been training Coughlin which gave this bout a teacher vs. pupil-themed backdrop.

This was a UWF-style match that was more submission-centric and less filled with strikes. The pace was more fluid and more in common with grappling or catch wrestling.

Barnett focused on Coughlin’s leg early, catching him in a single leg crab, but Coughlin escaped via rope break and slid out to the floor for a breather. Back in the ring, Barnett launched Coughlin with a front suplex, later locking him in a scarfhold — the same move he used to tap out Dean Lister at Metamoris.

Barnett went for an an armlock from the mount, but Coughlin blocked it. He was able to escape and apply a kneebar of his own until Barnett used a rope break himself.

Barnett later launched Coughlin with a single arm suplex and then a guillotine choke suplex. He transitioned to the armlock again, but Coughlin escaped and applied a single leg crab. Barnett rolled out of it and tried using a leglock, but the ref broke them up when they got tangled in the ropes.

They traded elbow shots. Barnett won out and then kicked Coughlin in the chest when he was on the ground. Coughlin powered up at the ten-minute mark and hit rolling deadlift gutwrench suplexes on Barnett. He went for the single leg crab again, but Barnett blocked, escaped, stood up and suplexed him. He picked Coughlin up and put him down with a cradle suplex, tapping him out with a heel hook. This was great.

Barnett grabbed the microphone and told Coughlin to stand up. He said that when he was asked by NJPW to help test Coughlin, he was honored. Coughlin got emotional. Barnett said he was impressed with Katsuyori Shibata’s training of Coughlin and that in the past two years Coughlin had been training with Barnett, Coughlin proved he had what it takes to take on anyone in the world and believed that Coughlin was now the real deal.

The crowd chanted Coughlin’s name and Barnett told him to soak it in. He said he better see him in the gym the next day so that they could make him even an “even meaner, badder MF’er” than before. They two shook hands and hugged before exiting. This was a really good segment.

Jonah defeated Lucas Riley

This was Jonah’s first official match in a NJPW ring. The former Bronson Reed in NXT and Jonah Rock took on Riley — a younger wrestler who came from the Santino Bros. wrestling school.

Riley tried waistlocking Jonah but the much, much larger Jonah threw him off like it was nothing. He then powerbombed Riley onto his neck like a ragdoll and flexed his muscles. Welcome to New Japan. He’s a regular Scott Norton. He chopped Riley across the chest and it sounded like a pistol firing. He launched Riley with a delayed vertical suplex.

Riley fired back with a brief flurry, but Jonah shut it down quickly. He drilled him with a backdrop driver reminiscent of Dr. Death Steve Williams. Jonah pinned Riley, but pulled him up at the count of two. He squashed Riley with a senton, pinned him and pulled him up at two again. He finally put Riley out of his misery after a massive top rope splash. Kevin Kelly shouted “God damn!” on commentary which was absolutely the right call after that spot. This was basically an old WWF Wrestling Challenge squash as Jonah came off like a beast.

Afterward, Dave Finlay hit the ring and went after Jonah, who had laid Finlay and Juice Robinson out at Battle in the Valley in San Jose last month. Finlay was fired up and called Jonah out. Jonah flipped him off and left ringside, ignoring Finlay.

Bullet Club (Jay White & Hikuleo) defeated Alex Zayne & Yuya Uemura

White went to do the “Too Sweet” gesture before the match, but Uemura turned him around and ordered him to start the match. Since Ueumura isn’t a Young Lion anymore, he’s demanding more respect from White. The two jaw jacked before the bell and had an even exchange early on.

Ueumura does arm drags just like Ricky Steamboat did. He tried using one on Hikuleo, but the much taller man wouldn’t budge. He mauled Ueumura and tagged White in. White tried tiring Ueumura out with a succession of lateral press pin attempts, but Ueumura was able to tag out after dropkicking White.

Zayne did a standing Harlem Hangover to White and Ueumura used running dropkicks on both Hikuleo and White. Late in the match, Ueumura was able to use a backdrop suplex on on the larger Hikuleo, but when he went to celebrate, White was standing behind him, waiting to take him out with a Blade Runner.

Zayne used a running frankensteiner to White, who was sitting on the top rope. When Zayne went for a flying knee, Hikuleo parried and then dropped him with a massive chokeslam. He went on to pin Zayne with a Tongan Driver to pick up the win for Bullet Club.

Afterward, White got on the mic and explained how his original plan was to come to NJPW Strong to host a NEVER Openweight championship open challenge series, but that wasn’t possible anymore because he lost the title to Tomohiro Ishii at Battle in the Valley last month.

Instead, he now has an open invitation to any wrestler in any company to take him on inside a NJPW Strong ring. He went on to call out Chris Sabin, Chris Jericho and finally Christopher Daniels, who he referred to as “local Los Angeles talent.” He offered to take Daniels on at the upcoming Nemesis show in Los Angeles next week before leaving the ring with Hikuleo.

Final thoughts:

This was a solid episode of Strong that offered quite a bit of variety compared with most weeks. The crowd was lively, which had an impact on the tone of the show. Their energy really came across on screen.

The opening tag match was fun. Coughlin’s second challenge match was an awesome UWF-style affair that also looked to be a great real life moment for him. Jonah’s debut couldn’t have gone any better. It was a textbook monster wrestler debut where Jonah looked like a behemoth and came off like an interesting threat to the current mix the show has.

The main event was good. What was most apparent by the end of the match was how over Jay White is in the US. He doesn’t deviate from the heel persona but even still, crowds are into him and he feels like a big deal when he shows up on a lower-stakes show like Strong. Also, does White have something against guys named Chris or something? He called out three of them tonight.

The second half of Detonation will air next week with Tomohiro Ishii vs. Brody King as the main event. 

NJPW Strong results: Ospreay & TJP vs. Narita & Connors

Saturday’s show kicked off the NJPW Showdown series that was filmed in Philadelphia at the 2300 Arena.

Team Filthy (West Coast Wrecking Crew & JR Kratos) defeated David Finlay, Alex Coughlin & Yuya Uemura

Team Filthy’s Danny Limelight did color commentary for this match. Coughlin and Kratos had a great exchange with a bodyslam during the match even getting a great reaction. Finlay did a dive to the floor midway through, but Kratos later planted him with a Sky High. The finish saw the Wrecking Crew put Uemura away after Royce Isaacs used a deadlift half-and-half-to-German suplex followed by a Jorel Nelson springboard back elbow with Isaacs pinning Uemura. Afterward, Kratos and Coughlin got into it.

Juice Robinson defeated El Phantasmo

Phantasmo poked Robinson in the eye. Robinson responded later with a pescado, landing on Phantasmo on the floor. Robinson later offered him a free shot to the face, but Phantasmo kicked him in the gut instead followed by back rakes.

Robinson came back later, sticking Phantasmo with a full nelson slam followed by a standing senton. He scored a two count after landing a fireman’s carry gutbuster. Phantasmo landed a big splash just before the ten minute mark. Phantasmo teased a One-Winged Angel, but Robinson escaped and shoved Robinson into the ref. He then gave Robinson a low blow and went for the pin, but the ref was still out. Robinson used Pulp Friction, but the ref was still down. He finally pinned Phantasmo after a sit-out fisherman’s buster.

After the match, Robinson called out Impact Wrestling’s Moose who he will wrestle at NJPW’s Battle in the Valley in San Jose this Saturday.

— A quick vignette for Buddy Matthews (fka Buddy Murphy in WWE) aired and it was announced Saturday that he is wrestling Kazuchika Okada this Saturday in San Jose.

Ren Narita and Clark Connors defeated United Empire (Will Ospreay & TJP)

Narita, who is really beginning to resemble his trainer Katsuyori Shibata, had the crowd chanting for him as soon as he stepped foot in the ring. TJP locked his head in a ankle scissors early, taunting the crowd as he squeezed. Connors was in next and chopped up his previous mentor and tag partner, TJP.

Ospreay broke up the babyface momentum when he stepped into the ring without tagging. He tried putting the boots to Narita and Connors, but they stopped him with a double back body drop.

United Empire gained another advantage when they laid Narita out and left him on the floor. They worked Connors over until he blasted Ospreay with a pounce off the ropes. He tagged out to Narita, who had recovered, and he began suplexing Ospreay all over the ring. Ospreay cut his offense short after connecting with a handspring somersault heel kick.

Ospreay went for the Stormbreaker on Narita, but Narita slipped out of it and locked on a sleeper. Connors then locked TJP in the Nirvana Strangle (the submission finisher for FMW’s Mr. Gannosuke) which is a full nelson camel clutch. Neither of the United Empire team submitted and both were forced to break the hold.

After a couple of very close near falls, Narita scored the pin after putting TJP down with a bridging front suplex. He will face Ospreay this Saturday in San Jose.

Afterward, Ospreay attacked and attempted putting Narita’s lights out with the Hidden Blade back elbow to the head. However, Narita ducked and threw a big boot that missed as Ospreay slipped away to the floor. Narita then took the mic, and in Japanese, he told Ospreay that he wasn’t interested in his fake IWGP World Heavyweight title belt. He said that all he wanted was a win and not to underestimate the LA Dojo. He sat cross-legged in the middle of the ring, offering Ospreay a free shot as Ospreay and TJP exited to the back.

Final Thoughts:

Tonight’s Strong was good but didn’t feel as big time as the past few. Maybe it’s just that we’re getting used to this current lineup that has been used this fall. The lighting and overall setup looked much better on this episode, especially when compared with the recent Autumn Attack run.

The main event was very good as well as Coughlin and Kratos’ exchanges during the opener. 

NJPW Strong results: Juice Robinson vs. Hikuleo Texas bullrope match

This week’s show was the third from the Autumn Attack tapings from Texas.

Ryusuke Taguchi, Ren Narita, Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC defeated David Finlay, Fred Yehi, Wheeler Yuta, Will Allday & Brogan Finlay

This featured wild action from beginning to end. Brogan Finlay (David’s brother) and Allday made their Strong debuts.

Yuta and Knight were in first, were great together and could tear it up in a singles match. Allday and Coughlin were in together next. On commentary, Alex Koslov called Coughlin “The Wall.” The kid is truly a brick shIthouse. “Mustache and muscle,” said Matt Rehwoldt.

Coughlin barked at Allday “You! Here! Now!” to come out of the corner and to the center of the ring, channeling his inner-Shibata. He hit a double gutwrench suplex on Allday and Yuta. Yes, two guys up and over at the same time. Coughlin is unreal.

The DKC and Yehi were in next. Yehi is pure technique mashed with raw power. Later, we got a glimpse of the 18-year-old Brogan, who resembles his father Fit a lot more than David. He has a similar singlet and similar dark long hair, too.

Taguchi later tagged in and cleaned house with a series of flying hip attacks. (I guess the “Funky Weapon” is his ass, right? It’s finally coming together.) He sounded like the most popular wrestler in the match. David Finlay neutralized the Weapon with a number of atomic drops.

Brogan came close to pinning Narita with a fisherman’s suplex and a couple of near falls. Narita answered with a brainbuster and tapped young Brogan out with—what else?—a Boston crab.

Chris Dickinson and Robbie Eagles defeated Bullet Club (El Phantasmo and Chris Bey)

This was the first time Phantasmo and Bey were in tag action together under Bullet Club.

Dickinson ragdolled Bey around the ring early on. Eagles, the current IWGP Junior heavyweight champion, and ELP had a nice exchange next. I could see them having a match for the title soon. Eagles did a crazy Dickinson-assisted tope onto the floor, taking out the the two latest Bullet Club members. Dickinson taunted ELP by doing his “too sweet” pose.

Later, El Phantasmo did four handsprings, a couple forward rolls, a backward-walking handstand and a spin before raking Eagles’ back. ELP is truly the Tiger Mask of backrakes.

Dickinson eventually made the save and cleaned house. He hit a double vertical suplex to Bey and ELP and then spiked Phantasmo with a brainbuster before Bey broke up the pin.

The finish saw Eagles and Bey go at it before the junior champion took Bey out with a 450 splash to the knee. He then proceeded to lock in the Ron Miller Special which got Bey to tap. Dickinson made sure ELP didn’t break things up and laid him out with a death valley bomb. This was really good.

United Empire (Will Ospreay & TJP) defeated Karl Fredericks and Clark Connors

They promoted this as Ospreay teaming with a mystery partner, but that was because the people at the venue weren’t privy to TJP joining United Empire at the prior Autumn Attack show in Texas.

Fredericks and Connors went after TJP and Ospreay before the bell rang. This was bedlam from the get-go with lots of brawling around the ring.

TJP, who was Connors’ mentor before last week’s heel turn, worked him over in the beginning. He gave him a series of hard face-wash kicks in the corner and later locked him in a reverse Indian deathlock. Ospreay tagged in laid in a few punches before Connors exploded, bowling Ospreay over with a running pounce before he tagged out to Fredericks.

Fredericks got another chance to be in the ring with Ospreay after last week’s singles match. He planted Ospreay with a spinebuster off the ropes and tagged out to Connors. Ospreay tagged out to TJP, but Connors was able to launch TJP with a big German suplex. He would later blast a seated TJP in the face with a diving back elbow from off the top ropes for two. Ten minutes had passed at this point.

The finish saw Connors run at TJP head-first in the corner, but TJP slipped out of the way, and Ospreay, who was on the floor, quickly removed the turnbuckle padding, so Connors crashed into an exposed ring post. TJP used a roll up and pulled on Connors’ tights for extra leverage to score the win for his team to end this good brawl.

Afterward, Ospreay attempted to lay out Connors again with a Hidden Blade elbow, but the rest of the LA Dojo trainees (Kevin Knight, Alex Coughlin, Ren Narita, the DKC, Yuya Uemura) came out ot the ring to make the save.

Juice Robinson defeated Hikuleo in a Texas bullrope match

Robinson was dressed in appropriate pro wrestling street fight attire: jeans with kneepads worn over them and a white tank top.

The rules: both wrestlers are bound at the wrist by the bullrope, roughly ten feet apart meaning both wrestlers would be forced to make contact. This was no DQ, no countout with the finish by ref stoppage, pin or submission.

Hikuleo attacked Robinson before the bell and removed his wrist from the rope, whipping Robinson with the bullrope. The referee ordered him to reattach the rope but Hikuleo refused and knocked him over. He powerslammed Robinson and strangled him with the bullrope. He hung Robinson with the bullrope from over the top rope.

Referee Jeremy Marcus finally made his way back into the match and Hikuleo and Robinson eventually reattached to each other at the wrists with the rope. Robinson pulled the rope forward while Hikuleo was across the ring on the adjacent side, pulling him face-first into the ringpost a few times. He tied Hikuleo against the ringpost on the floor with the rope and hit him a few times with a cooking pan that was under the ring. Hikuleo later got a hold of the pan and decked Robinson with it. The Dallas crowd started chanting “This is awesome.”

Hikuleo started dragging Robinson into the guardrail with the bullrope. When Hikuleo tried taking the fight backstage, like he did in his brawl with Fred Rosser earlier this year, Robinson fired back, blasting the very large Tongan with a garbage can lid to the head.

Robinson began throwing foreign objects into the ring: pans, a garbage can, and a number of steel chairs. He placed two chairs in the corner horizontally and went to whip Hikuleo into them, but Hikuleo reversed the whip, so Robinson had to baseball slide under the ropes to avoid slamming into the chairs. When he landed on the floor, he yanked on the bullrope which launched Hikuleo into the chairs. This spot could have been a disaster, but it was perfect in execution. These two are not small either, so respect to both for pulling it off.

Robinson went to the top rope in an attempt to finish off the match, but Hikuleo pulled the rope which pulled Robinson off the top. Hikuleo then chokeslammed him. He climbed atop Robinson in the corner and went to punch him in the head, but Juice slipped out from under him, then crotched him with the bullrope. Hikuleo crumbled to the mat and Robinson crotched him with the rope. I counted six yoinks. He landed one or two more before the end of the match.

Toward the end, Robinson put a garbage can over Hikuleo’s head and came off the middle rope to smash him with the cowbell part of the bullrope. He would then wrap the rope around Hikuleo’s neck and lock in what was basically a camel clutch with the bullrope until Hikuleo passed out. The ref called the match so Robinson won via TKO. Remember, Hikuleo didn’t tap—he passed out.

Final Thoughts:

This might have been the most eclectic episode of NJPW Strong in its short existence. The latter half featured tons of brawling and the main event between Robinson and Hikuleo was undoubtedly their best of the handful they have had together this year. Both wrestlers have lots of fun in crazy gritty, dirty no-DQ brawls.

The first two matches showcased some of the best young talent the company has at the moment, including a handful of debuts. It was all action overall on another special 90-minute edition of the show.

Brody King reveals recent COVID-19 diagnosis despite vaccination

Ring of Honor and New Japan Strong talent Brody King revealed that he recently tested positive for COVID-19 despite being fully vaccinated.

While on the Wrestling Inc. podcast, King said that had the virus last week but tested negative last Sunday.

The head man of VLNCE UNLTD was set to appear in a ten-man tag match at NJPW Resurgence last Saturday, but was pulled on the day of the show due to “unforseen circumstances.”

King said that it started with him experiencing a bad head cold and that he immediately got tested because “you just can’t assume anything anymore” and blow it off as allergies or a cold.

After testing positive, King quarantined in his basement for a week and was relieved to know that both his wife and children have continued to test negative.

On the recent location change for ROH Death By Dishonor, the former Six-Man Tag Team Champion said he was bummed out by the change because he was looking forward to performing there and to see his friends at the shows.

He is scheduled for both of this weekend’s ROH Glory by Honor shows in Philadelphia, PA.

NJPW Strong TV taping spoilers: Ospreay, Lawlor, Ishii, White

The following are spoilers from Monday’s TV taping for New Japan Strong, held in Los Angeles, CA.

  • Tomohiro Ishii defeated Alex Coughlin in a Challenge Series match
  • Chris Dickinson defeated Royce Isaacs
  • Hikuleo defeated Juice Robinson in a tables match. Robinson was favoring his left shoulder and also hit the back of his head on a table during a senton spot. The finish came right after that.
  • Yuji Nagata and Yuya Uemura defeated The DKC and Kevin Knight
  • Clark Connors, Karl Fredericks and IWGP U.S. Champion Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Bateman, Barrett Brown and Misterioso. After the match, Fredericks called out Will Ospreay. The two had a face-off and then brawled. Ospreay hit the Hidden Blade and accepted Fredericks’ challenge for the upcoming Dallas show.
  • JR Kratos defeated Fred Yehi
  • Ren Narita defeated Fred Rosser
  • NEVER Openweight Champion Jay White defeated Wheeler Yuta in a non-title match. Afterward, White called out Ishii and they faced off. The two had words and then brawled before White hit a low blow and a Blade Runner before leaving.
  • NJPW Strong Champion Tom Lawlor defeated Lio Rush. Afterward, Lawlor asked who his next challenger would be and Narita came out. After dismissing him, Narita dropped Lawlor and left.

NJPW Strong results: Team Filthy vs. Fredericks & Rush

Barrett Brown (with Bateman & Misterioso) defeated Wheeler Yuta

Wheeler seemed to have an edge over Brown on offense. He put Brown into a bow-and-arrow stretch submission but Brown slipped out. Wheeler later caught Brown with a high dropkick to the face.

Brown gained an advantage after kicking the ropes into Wheeler’s throat while he was hanging over the ropes. He applied a chin lock and illegally fish hooked Wheeler until the ref made him break the hold. More dirty fighting, or, really, more Bateman-inspired offense. Brown would actually walk over and confer with Bateman, who was cornering him at ringside.

Brown missed a swanton from the top rope. Wheeler earned a close two-count with a German suplex. When Wheeler locked in a modified STF, Bateman slid into the ring to distract the ref. Wheeler broke the hold to confront Bateman, and while the ref argued with him, Misterioso snuck in from the opposite side of the ring and gave a backcracker to Wheeler. Brown recovered then pinned Wheeler to pick up the win. 

Brown’s win streak continues, and the story is that Brown only wins matches when he resorts to illegal tactics, ones that he learned from Bateman.

Hikuleo defeated Fred Yehi

Hikuleo shoved Yehi to the mat at the beginning of the match, then sneered at him. Yehi later took the big man down to the mat and locked in a Koji Clutch early on. Hikuleo shut Yehi down early and took control of the offense for much of the middle part of this match, up until Yehi shot a flurry of bicycle up-kicks to a standing Hikuleo. Yehi went back to the Koji Clutch, then transitioned to a seated headscissors and threw a few Gary Goodridge-style elbow smashes. 

Hikuleo wrapped his hand around Yehi’s throat and threatened a chokeslam; Yehi escaped. When he ran off the ropes, Hikuelo caught him with a sudden snap-powerslam for two. He’d put Yehi away in 5:39 after a sit-out Death Valley Bomb.

Afterwards, Hikuleo grabbed the mic and cut a rare in-ring promo demanding that New Japan give him stronger opponents. “This is too easy,” he said. As soon as he said that, Juice Robinson’s music sounded. He appeared at ringside, mic in hand.

“Correct me if I’m wrong, but did I hear your 8’0” ass whining about the lack of competition here on Strong?” After calling him a “baby giraffe”, Juice challenged Hikuleo to a match that was later confirmed for Resurgence tomorrow.

Karl Fredericks and Lio Rush defeated Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor & Danny Limelight)

Lots of action in this one. Fredericks jumped Team Filthy before the bell. He laid in about a half-dozen elbows to Lawlor before “Filthy” was able to temporarily neutralize Fredericks to collect himself. Rush did a bottom-rope springboard dive onto Limelight who was on the floor.

Fredericks went for Manifest Destiny early but he couldn’t lift Lawlor up. He’d instead drop a huge elbow onto Lawlor, and then Rush caught Lawlor with a running frog splash.

When Fredericks next bounced off the ropes, Limelight kneed him in the back. Fredericks turned around and ran towards Limelight on the apron with a big boot, but Limelight dropped to the floor, so Fredericks’ leg got hung up on the top rope. Lawlor took advantage and went to town on an incapacitated Fredericks. He’d next apply a straight ankle lock and tore away at Fredericks’ knee.

The middle part of this match was primarily Lawlor and Limelight attempting to destroy Fredericks’ knee, right up until Fredericks was able to escape to the red corner and tag out to a fresh Lio Rush, who’d go on to clean the proverbial house. He caught Limelight with a handspring elbow, then dove through the bottom ropes onto Lawlor with a tope suicida.

Back in the ring, Lawlor launched Rush with a modified uranage slam. Rush would recover later but miss a frog splash from the top. He tumbled through and went for a frankensteiner, but Limelight turned it into a backcracker bomb for two.

Towards the end, Fredericks and Lawlor brawled all the way down to the floor. In the ring, Rush was able to use his first-rope springboard cutter to put Limelight away and pick up the win for him and Fredericks.

After the match, Fredericks and Rush cut a promo on Tom Lawlor and Team Filthy and claimed Lawlor wouldn’t be Openweight champion for much longer. Fredericks said he wouldn’t let Lawlor walk into New Japan and take his and his boys’ jobs. Both showed good delivery on the mic.

Final thoughts:

Tonight’s episode was solid, yet again. Barrett Brown’s working relationship with Bateman continued to develop as Brown picked up another singles win over Wheeler YUTA. Yehi, who’s usually a tag wrestler on the show, fell to Hikuleo, who will challenge the returning Juice Robinson in the near future. And Team Filthy vs. NJoA continues to evolve, with Fredericks as the de facto leader of the Strong ship, so it seems.

“Steady as she goes” would be an accurate phrase to describe tonight’s show. It was quality but also didn’t deviate from prior episodes. No surprises here, but really, that’s not to be expected on this show. Strong succeeds in its quality consistency and its commitment to a simple, hard-hitting in-ring product. But if you’re expecting angles and surprise swerves peppered into your wrestling, maybe NJPW Strong isn’t the show for you.