MVP says he ‘invented’ idea for NJPW World

Before New Japan World came into existence, MVP was pushing for NJPW to cater to its English-speaking fans more.

MVP spent two years with NJPW from 2011-2013, wrestling for the company in the early stages of its resurgence. That period saw NJPW start to gain more fans internationally as it became easier to watch the product. NJPW first started to stream pay-per-views and other events on Ustream before launching NJPW World in 2014.

On a new episode of his Marking Out podcast, MVP detailed a meeting he had with NJPW officials where he urged them to find ways to make the product more accessible to fans outside of Japan. MVP felt like NJPW was leaving a lot of money on the table by not having easy ways for international fans to buy merchandise or watch shows.

“Here’s something that is factual. This is an absolute fact — the idea for New Japan World, I pitched to President [Naoki] Sugabayashi long before it became a reality,” MVP said. “I had a meeting with Sugabayashi. He was the president back then. Jado, Gedo, Red Shoes, and Tiger Hattori. And I was telling them, ‘You guys are missing out on a lot of f*cking money. You have a huge English-speaking audience in the United States, in England, in Australia. You’re not marketing to them.’ I said, ‘You guys need a website that has an English translation. You’re not thinking about your audience outside of Japan.’ I said, ‘You need to make your product accessible to English-speaking fans outside the country.’

“I said, ‘You know, what you can do is set up like a YouTube page, you know, but in English, aimed at American fans.’ I said, ‘Pick three matches a week that you want to highlight, put it on the YouTube channel. I’ll help you get two Americans to do the voiceover in English for that match and start feeding your English audience.'”

MVP said he even asked fans on Twitter to let NJPW know how much they wanted more accessibility. There was a strong response from fans who agreed with him.

“So yes, true story. I invented New Japan World,” MVP said. “I pitched that idea to them before it existed. And I don’t know how long it took from the time we talked about it until it actually came to fruition, but I’m the one that suggested that they do that.”

Wrestling for NJPW was a dream for MVP, who left WWE so that he could compete in Japan. He later returned to WWE and is now with AEW, where he recently signed a new contract. He is part of The Hurt Syndicate with Bobby Lashley and Shelton Benjamin.

NJPW World launching ‘new features and improvements’ this fall

New Japan Pro Wrestling has announced some significant upgrades are coming to its streaming service, NJPW World, this fall.  

The new service will include apps for iOS, Android, and Roku TV. Video on the service will be upgraded to full HD and users will also have the ability to download content to watch offline. Search functions will also be improved. 

The price for the service is increasing from ¥999 JPY ($6.82 USD) per month to ¥1,298 JPY ($8.86 USD) per month. It is expected to debut this fall. However, an exact release date for the new streaming service has yet to be announced. 

“The new price point will come into effect at the next payment date after the renewal. Those who wish to unsubscribe or delete their accounts must do so before that date. The first payment date under the new plan will be announced at a later time,” NJPW1972.com reads. 

Returning subscribers will not need to re-register for the new service. Their payments will automatically be increased to the new price. Pay-per-view content previously purchased by users will automatically transfer over to the new service. 

NJPW World’s current app on Amazon Fire TV app will no longer be supported following the debut of the new service, but a new app will be made available for download. Customers being billed through Amazon will have their subscription payments canceled in the coming days. 

‘My Dad is a Heel Wrestler’ movie coming to NJPW World

“My Dad is a Heel Wrestler” is coming to New Japan World later this week.

The movie, which came out in 2018 and stars Hiroshi Tanahashi, will be uploaded to NJPW World at midnight Japan Standard Time on Saturday, April 4. It will have English subtitles available.

“My Dad is a Heel Wrestler” tells “the tale of a former top-flight, fan-favorite wrestler trying to reclaim a bond with both the public and his son.”

Outside of Japan, the movie is being made available in America, Great Britain, Australia, Canada, and Germany and can be streamed from when it’s uploaded until September 3, 2020.

In Japan, the movie can be streamed on NJPW World until April 3, 2021.

During NJPW and CMLL’s Fantasticamania tour in January 2019, Tanahashi & Ryusuke Taguchi faced Kazuchika Okada & Togi Makabe in a match where all four wrestled as their in-ring personas from “My Dad is a Heel Wrestler.”

The movie is being added to NJPW World as part of the NJPW Together project, which features alternative content being uploaded while new events aren’t happening due to the coronavirus pandemic.

ROH announces broadcast details for G1 Supercard

Ring of Honor has officially announced broadcasting details for the upcoming G1 Supercard event on April 6.

The company confirmed on their website that both New Japan World and HonorClub will stream the show live. For HonorClub, it will be available for all users, not just those who include pay-per-view events in their package.

They also announced that the show will be a pay-per-view event on satellite and cable for $39.99. Additionally, the pay-per-view will be available on FITE TV for the same price.

No matches have been announced for the card. However, the winner of next month’s New Japan Cup tournament will challenge Jay White for the IWGP Heavyweight title on the show.

Tickets have been sold out for the event since August. The show, which will be held at Madison Square Garden, is the first pro wrestling event to be held at the venue by a promotion not owned by the McMahon family since November 1960.

NJPW G1 Climax 2017: Non-tournament schedule, tag title matches set

The full cards for each of the G1 Climax events taking place over the next month have been revealed, save for the G1 Finals on August 13th.

Most undercards feature a mixture of tag team matches, usually pitting G1 opponents against one another in a preview for their match on the next card. Most are standard fare you’ll find on any New Japan show, though the Korakuen Hall shows do start out with stable matches between members of Chaos and Los Ingobernables. There’s also the occasional tag match pitting members of LIJ, Suzuki-gun or Bullet Club against one another, which normally doesn’t happen that often.

All of the New Japan young lions will appear sporadically on the cards. Interestingly, there are a couple of singles matches in the undercard as well, both featuring Chase Owens against a young lion.

Although the complete lineup for the finals hasn’t been released yet (it will most likely be announced the day of), two title matches have been confirmed.

New IWGP Tag Team Champions War Machine will make their first defense against Hangman Page & Cody. Meanwhile, The Young Bucks will look to retain their titles once more as they square off against the relatively new team of Ryusuke Taguchi & Ricochet.

Match listings, times, and other notes —

July 17th — Hokkaido (A Block, 2 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Kota Ibushi vs. Tetsuya Naito
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Hirooki Goto vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Togi Makabe vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Yuji Nagata vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Gedo & Kazuchika Okada vs. Jado & Toru Yano
  • BUSHI & SANADA vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • El Desperado, Taichi & Minoru Suzuki vs. Chase Owens, Tama Tonga & Kenny Omega
  • Jushin Thunder Liger, Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. David Finlay, Juice Robinson & Michael Elgin

July 20th — Korakuen Hall (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Kenny Omega
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Toru Yano
  • SANADA vs. EVIL
  • Michael Elgin vs. Tama Tonga
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Juice Robinson
  • Jado and YOSHI-HASHI vs. BUSHI and Tetsuya Naito
  • David Finlay and Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chase Owens and Bad Luck Fale
  • Tiger Mask, Yuji Nagata & Togi Makabe vs. Gedo, Tomohiro Ishii & Hirooki Goto
  • Hirai Kawato & Kota Ibushi vs. El Desperado & Zack Sabre Jr.

July 21st — Korakuen Hall (A Block, 5:30 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Tetsuya Naito vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Togi Makabe vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Yuji Nagata vs. Hirooki Goto
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Satoshi Kojima & Michael Elgin vs. Gedo, Toru Yano & Kazuchika Okada
  • Yujiro Takahashi & Kenny Omega vs. Chase Owens & Tama Tonga
  • Taichi & Minoru Suzuki vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL

July 22nd — Korakuen Hall (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Michael Elgin
  • Kenny Omega vs. Tama Tonga
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. SANADA
  • EVIL vs. Juice Robinson
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Toru Yano
  • Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale vs. Hiromu Takahashi, BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • Katsuya Kitamura & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Tomoyuki Oka & Yuji Nagata
  • Jado & YOSHI-HASHI vs. El Desperado & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • David Finlay, Kota Ibushi & Togi Makabe vs. Gedo, Tomohiro Ishii & Hirooki Goto

July 23rd — Tokyo Machida Gymnasium (A Block, 5 a.m. ET)

  • Togi Makabe vs. Hirooki Goto
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yuji Nagata
  • YOSHI-HASHI vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Gedo & Kazuchika Okada vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • Jado & Toru Yano vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Kenny Omega
  • Chase Owens & Tama Tonga vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • Hirai Kawato, David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. El Desperado, Taichi & Minoru Suzuki
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. Katsuya Kitamura & Michael Elgin

July 25th — Fukushima (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Kazuchika Okada vs. SANADA
  • Kenny Omega vs. Toru Yano
  • Juice Robinson vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • Tama Tonga vs. EVIL
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Michael Elgin
  • David Finlay & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Jado & Hirooki Goto
  • El Desperado, Taichi & Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale
  • Yuji Nagata & Hirai Kawato vs. Hiromu Takahashi & Tetsuya Naito
  • Tomoyuki Oka & Katsuya Kitamura vs. YOSHI-HASHI & Tomohiro Ishii
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Togi Makabe vs. Shota Umino & Kota Ibushi

July 26th — Miyagi (A Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Hirooki Goto
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Togi Makabe
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. Gedo & Kazuchika Okada
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Michael Elgin vs. Chase Owens & Kenny Omega
  • Taichi & Minoru Suzuki vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • Jado & Toru Yano vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Tama Tonga

July 27th — Niigata (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Michael Elgin vs. Kenny Omega
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Satoshi Kojima
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. EVIL
  • SANADA vs. Toru Yano
  • Juice Robinson vs. Tama Tonga
  • David Finlay & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. YOSHI-HASHI & Hirooki Goto
  • Jado & Tomohiro Ishii vs. BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • Katsuya Kitamura, Tomoyuki Oka & Kota Ibushi vs. Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Togi Makabe vs. Hirai Kawato & Yuji Nagata
  • Ren Narita & Shota Umino vs. El Desperado & Zack Sabre Jr.

July 29th — Aichi (A Block, 5:00 a.m. ET)

  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Hirooki Goto vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Togi Makabe vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Juice Robinson vs. Gedo & Kazuchika Okada
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. Chase Owens & Kenny Omega
  • Taichi & Minoru Suzuki vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Tama Tonga
  • Jado & Toru Yano vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • David Finlay & Michael Elgin vs. BUSHI & SANADA  

July 30th — Gifu (B Block, 3:30 a.m. ET)

  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Juice Robinson
  • Kenny Omega vs. Satoshi Kojima
  • Michael Elgin vs. SANADA
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Tama Tonga
  • EVIL vs. Toru Yano
  • Jado & Hirooki Goto vs. Hiromu Takahashi & Tetsuya Naito
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Hirai Kawato & Kota Ibushi
  • Tomoyuki Oka & Yuji Nagata vs. YOSHI-HASHI & Tomohiro Ishii
  • Shota Umino & Togi Makabe vs. El Desperado & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Tetsuhiro Yagi, Katsuya Kitamura & David Finlay vs. Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale

August 1st — Kagoshima (A Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kota Ibushi
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Hirooki Goto
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Togi Makabe vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • YOSHI-HASHI vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Gedo & Kazuchika Okada vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Tama Tonga
  • Chase Owens & Kenny Omega vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • Hirai Kawato, Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. El Desperado, Taichi & Minoru Suzuki
  • Jushin Thunder Liger & Michael Elgin vs. Jado & Toru Yano

August 2nd — Fukuoka (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Kenny Omega vs. EVIL
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Tama Tonga
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Satoshi Kojima
  • Michael Elgin vs. Toru Yano
  • SANADA vs. Juice Robinson
  • Jushin Thunder Liger & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. David Finlay & Togi Makabe
  • El Desperado, Taichi & Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Hiromu Takahashi, BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • YOSHI-HASHI, Tomohiro Ishii & Hirooki Goto vs. Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale
  • Hirai Kawato & Yuji Nagata vs. Tiger Mask & Kota Ibushi
  • Shota Umino & Tomoyuki Oka vs. Ren Narita & Katsuya Kitamura

August 4th — Ehime (A Block, 6 a.m. ET)

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Togi Makabe
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Hirooki Goto vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Gedo & Kazuchika Okada vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • David Finlay and Juice Robinson vs. Chase Owens & Kenny Omega
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • Jado & Toru Yano vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Tama Tonga
  • Hirai Kawato, Tiger Mask & Michael Elgin vs. El Desperado, Taichi & Minoru Suzuki

August 5th — Osaka (B Block, 4 a.m. ET)

  • Kazuchika Okada vs. EVIL
  • Kenny Omega vs. Juice Robinson
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Michael Elgin
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. SANADA
  • Tama Tonga vs. Toru Yano
  • David Finlay, Hiroshi Tanahashi & Kota Ibushi vs. Gedo, YOSHI-HASHI & Tomohiro Ishii
  • Jado & Hirooki Goto vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale
  • Hirai Kawato, Tiger Mask & Togi Makabe vs. Hiromu Takahashi, BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • Shota Umino, Tomoyuki Oka & Yuji Nagata vs. El Desperado, Taichi & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Chase Owens vs. Katsuya Kitamura

August 6th — Shizuoka (A Block, 3 a.m. ET)

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • Tetsuya Naito vs. Togi Makabe
  • Hirooki Goto vs. Bad Luck Fale
  • Kota Ibushi vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Gedo & Kazuchika Okada vs. El Desperado & Minoru Suzuki
  • Chase Owens & Kenny Omega vs. BUSHI & SANADA
  • David Finlay & Juice Robinson vs. Jado & Toru Yano
  • Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Tama Tonga
  • Hirai Kawato & Michael Elgin vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL

August 8th — Kanagawa (B Block, 5:30 a.m. ET)

  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • Kenny Omega vs. SANADA
  • Michael Elgin vs. EVIL
  • Juice Robinson vs. Toru Yano
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. Tama Tonga
  • David Finlay, Hiroshi Tanahashi & Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Hiromu Takahashi, BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • Jado & Tomohiro Ishii vs El Desperado & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Hirai Kawato, Kota Ibushi & Togi Makabe vs. Gedo, YOSHI-HASHI & Hirooki Goto
  • Katsuya Kitamura & Yuji Nagata vs. Yujiro Takahashi & Bad Luck Fale
  • Chase Owens vs. Tomoyuki Oka

August 11th — Sumo Hall (A Block Finals, 5:30 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Kota Ibushi vs. Hirooki Goto
  • Bad Luck Fale vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Togi Makabe vs. YOSHI-HASHI
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Tetsuya Naito
  • Kazuchika Okada & Gedo vs. Kenny Omega & Yujiro Takahashi
  • Michael Elgin, Ricochet, Ryusuke Taguchi & War Machine vs. Cody, The Young Bucks, Chase Owens & Hangman Page
  • Jado & Toru Yano vs. Taichi & Minoru Suzuki
  • Juice Robinson & Satoshi Kojima vs. Hiromu Takahashi & EVIL
  • Guerrillas of Destiny vs. BUSHI & SANADA

August 12th — Sumo Hall (B Block Finals, 5:30 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Tama Tonga vs. SANADA
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Toru Yano
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Kenny Omega
  • Michael Elgin vs. Juice Robinson
  • Satoshi Kojima vs. EVIL
  • David Finlay, Kota Ibushi & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. .Hiromu Takahashi, BUSHI & Tetsuya Naito
  • Katsuya Kitamura, Ricochet, Ryusuke Taguchi & War Machine vs. Cody, Bad Luck Fale, The Young Bucks & Hangman Page
  • Yuji Nagata & Togi Makabe vs. Takashi Iizuka & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • YOSHI-HASHI, Tomohiro Ishii & Hirooki Goto vs. Chase Owens, Yujiro Takahashi & Tanga Roa
  • Hirai Kawato, Tiger Mask, Jushin Thunder Liger & KUSHIDA vs. Taka Michinoku, El Desperado, Taichi & Yoshinobu Kanemaru

August 13th — Sumo Hall (G1 Climax 27 Finals, 2 a.m. ET) (English Commentary)

  • Winner of the A Block vs. Winner of the B Block in the tournament finals
  • IWGP Tag Team Champions War Machine defending against Cody & Hangman Page
  • IWGP Junior Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks defending against Ryusuke Taguchi & Ricochet

NJPW on AXS G1 2015 report: Naito vs. Tanahashi; Ishii vs. Nakamura

We got two hours to cover this week of G1 2015 coverage, so let’s not waste any time!

July 26, 2015 in Hiroshima:

Katsuyori Shibata vs. Togi Makabe

This, of course, was super stiff, but nothing out of the ordinary. Good, not great. Shibata got the win with the penalty kick.

AJ Styles vs. Kota Ibushi

This was good stuff. I loved the sequence near the end where Kota tried a hurricanrana off the top rope, but AJ blocked hit and hit a hurricanrana just for Ibushi to counter with a rollup, but AJ countered with a Styles Clash attempt. I keep saying this like a broken record, but Ibushi is so great; the last place he needs to be is in IGF where there’s like zero buzz. The burnout is totally understandable, but at the same time I feel like his eccentricities are getting the best of his career. Kota wins with the phoenix splash in a really great match.

Tetsuya Naito is interviewed. He went to Mexico in May (2015) and mentioned how he met people like La Sombra and Rush and how they wrestled freely; he was jealous. As he teamed with them in matches he felt a sense of joy, so he wanted to bring that to Japan. He felt that he needed to stick to his own style. But after wrestling in Mexico, he realized he needed to branch out. He could say he has no feelings regarding Tanahashi, but that would be a lie. He doesn’t have much more to be say regarding him.

Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Tetsuya Naito

A great showcase for the new Naito here. He took his time taking off his suit (he’s replaced that with just taking a very long time getting to the ring and harassing Milano Collection AT), posed during matches and even took his time brawling around the ring, including a neckbreaker onto a table. In fact, a lot of this match was the two just brawling around, with Naito getting the upper hand. They eventually make their way back to the ring and bust out a ton of great offense.

I really liked the work on Naito’s knee (he was out for a long period of time a couple of years prior due to a blown out knee) including the two high fly flows on it. Naito got the somewhat surprising win with his new finisher, Destino (a standing sliced bread).

In a post match promo, he told the Japanese people to calm down. No one can stop him now, He finished off his short promo saying LOS INGOBERNABLES!

Tanahashi says this was one of his top 5 disappointing matches as he’s helped out backstage. He said the match was what it was – it was destiny. At first, no one could even pronounce los Ingobernables, but as the tournament went on he gained more confidence. He wants Los Ingobernables to gain strength in New Japan.

Shinsuke Nakamura welcomes us to the second hour of New Japan on AXS.

This footage is from August 1 in Osaka.

Karl Anderson vs. Yuji Nagata

Pretty decent match. I liked the work in the beginning where Anderson worked on Nagata’s ribs while Nagata worked on the arm. Anderson got the win after a gun stun out of nowhere.

Anderson told Nagata in a very rude manner to make him some food and do his laundry. Nagata didn’t have much response.

Tomoaki Honma vs. Michael Elgin

Elgin was such a fresh face in this tournament -literally everyone else was in the tournament a year prior, so seeing some new match ups here was pretty great. Elgin proved just how great a talent he really is by doing some of the best work of his career in this tournament, and prove a lot of his haters wrong with some terrific offense that really got Elgin over.

This was a great match. People were super into both guys and wanted Honma to get the big win. My favorite spot was the deadlift falcon arrow onto the apron to the mat – such a great spot! Elgin gets the win with the buckle bomb and a sitout powerbomb. Great match.

Elgin says he’s back on track and how he’s on his way to the finals, because that’s just how good he is. Honma was amazed by Elgin’s power; he really wanted to win, but he will be happy with a win next time.

Nakamura mentions his elbow injury that kept him off some of the G1 shows and mentions how he wanted to get back in the ring very quickly. He stayed on tour during his injury, saying he would go to different hospitals to get the treatment he needed. It was tough for him to get his way back, and wasn’t until Osaka where he was finally able to return.

Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Tomohiro Ishii

This was really great. Just built up really well from start to finish and the crowd was totally into it from start to finish. Both guys worked super hard. I loved the spot near the end where Nakamura went for another boma ye, Ishii stopped him but countered with the flying armbar scissors. Is that not the coolest move in pro wrestling? Both guys are awesome and they had, in fact, a really tremendous match. Nakamura got the win after a boma ye.

Nakamura says he had to give his all against Ishii, and glad he was able to face him. He was also happy he only missed one G1 match due to injury so he’s still in the game. In his reflective interview, he says he was very eager to face Ishii. Each one of their hits was full of passion. He appreciated that Ishii never tried to attack his elbow. He had to bring out everything he had, or he wouldn’t be able to stand. He felt that, even though saying this was weird, that it was a great comeback story.

Lots of great action on these shows; be sure to check them out!