NJPW Strong results: KENTA vs. Jeff Cobb

TJP and ACH defeated Adrian Quest and Logan Riegel

Veterans vs. young guns here. Riegel and ACH were in first and exploded into action from the bell, Riegel storming at ACH, who leapfrogged out of the way.

Quest landed a twisting springboard cross-body block on TJP next. Lots of fast and technical action between these two.

After the veteran team handled business for a few minutes, Riegel tagged out to Quest, who landed a big cross body from the top onto both TJP and ACH, shifting the momentum for a bit until ACH spiked Quest with a brainbuster, then pinned him after a diving splash off the top for the win.

Rocky Romero defeated Danny Limelight via submission

Natural chemistry between these two. Limelight got huge air when he landed a dive to the floor onto Romero early in the match.

Romero used Strong Zero for two. Limelight later went for a diving tornado ddt but Romero blocked it, then snapped a Limelight down with an armbreaker. He later put Limelight away with an arm lock submission for the win. Good match.

Between matches, they announced that the next volume in NJPW Strong starts next week with Lion’s Break Crown.

Guerillas of Destiny defeated PJ Black and Dave Finlay

Black and Finlay were stablemates for a brief time last year as a part of the Lifeblood faction. Black and Tonga were first in for their teams. Tonga rolled to the floor early on and jaw jacked with Black and later Finlay for most of the first part of this.

Finlay countered next with a high dropkick. Later, when Tonga slid to the floor again, Loa jumped in and took out Finlay while he wasn’t paying attention. He then body slammed him onto the floor as the ref started the count out call.

Loa and Black were in together late in the match. Black landed a top rope springboard moonsault for two. When he went for the Placebo Effect, Tonga crotched him on the turnbuckle. Loa went on to pin Black after using Apes**t (fire-thunder driver). Fine match.

KENTA defeated Jeff Cobb

Announcer Kevin Kelley mentioned their recent US title tournament match where Cobb scored a “visual pinfall” despite KENTA winning the actual match after a low blow behind the ref’s back.

KENTA rolled to the floor immediately and for the first few minutes stalled. When he finally got back into the ring, he laced Cobb with hard leg kicks. Cobb sold them really well, even to a point where KENTA taunted him, asking “do you give up?” While they circled each other.

Cobb launched KENTA with a front suplex and KENTA slid to the floor to gather himself. He snuck back in the ring and went after Cobb’s legs with kicks again. KENTA then took Cobb to the mat and continued working over Cobb’s leg, mixing submission holds and hard low kicks as part of his attack.

Cobb used a short lariat to put KENTA out for a bit. When he tried landing his running elbow from corner to corner, he sold his leg like it was too painful to even run across the ring. When he couldn’t make it to the corner, KENTA capitalized and took control from there, first planting Cobb with a draping DDT.

Cobb rallied back with a big Samoan drop, then went for the Tour of the Islands, but KENTA used the ref for leverage to pull himself out of the hold. Cobb almost clocked the ref, like in their previous match, but he stopped himself first. It was pointless, though, because once again, KENTA grabbed the ref, pulling in the way. Cobb accidentally punched him out as a result. KENTA then laid Cobb out with a regular DDT, then rolled to the floor to get a chair. 

When he went to smash Cobb with said chair, Cobb blocked it, then used a spin cycle suplex on KENTA for another “visual pinfall,” as the ref was still out at this point. After a few more moments, KENTA used a low blow on Cobb, but Cobb powered through the pain and planted KENTA with Tour of the Islands, though Cobb couldn’t pin KENTA because of his injured leg.

When the ref was finally back up, he started counting but only made it to two–Chase Owens dragged him out of the ring, then went after Cobb and beat on him in the ring. Cobb again powered through the ambush, taking Owens out, but KENTA found time to grab his red IWGP US title contract briefcase and hit Cobb with it before landing Go-2-Sleep to score the win.

KENTA cut a promo afterwards saying he’d win the US title soon, but didn’t mention Jon Moxley, the current champion, by name.

Final thoughts:

This was one of the weaker episodes of NJPW Strong. To be fair, they’ve set a high bar from the start, so it’s not to say tonight’s episode was bad by any means. But it definitely felt stale at times. 

The main event was the best match on the card, but the finish was weak. It was basically a rehash of their recent US tournament, and while both were good, it has me asking, “What was the point of that?” Also, NJPW’s dependence on ref bumps to protect booking plans has gone too far. We’re moving towards go-away heat at this point. These are macro-nitpicks, though, as tonight’s show was still good.

The show will host a series called Lion’s Break Crown starting next week. Stay tuned to the front page for more details.

NJPW Strong results: New Japan Cup USA opening round

New Japan Strong debuted tonight on the NJPW World streaming service. The first episode centered on the New Japan Cup USA 2020, a single-elimination tournament where the winner will earn a shot at Jon Moxley’s IWGP United States championship.

Each of tonight’s participants cut short promos talking up the Cup. Tama Tonga mentioned we would see a side of him that we’ve never seen before. KENTA mentioned he’s “also known as Little K,” which I wasn’t aware of.

KENTA defeated Karl Fredericks

Really good. KENTA got into Karl Fredericks’ face before the bell, so Fredericks laid him out with an elbow shot. KENTA fired back minutes into the match with rough kicks. KENTA was in full-on heel mode and was really strong here. He’s much smaller than Fredericks, but because of his in-ring style and bully personality, it’s easy to buy into.

KENTA landed a powerslam on Fredericks at about five minutes into the match. He dominated pretty much all of this match, and he did a good job at getting Fredericks over as a serious contender in the wider NJPW context.

Fredericks used a high-angle half-crab and KENTA sold it like he was in pure agony until he grabbed the ropes.

KENTA took Fredericks out with a huge lariat, and after another minute or so of a struggle, he finally put Fredericks away with Go to Sleep.

Jeff Cobb defeated Tonga Loa

Things picked up a few minutes in, when Cobb started taking Tonga Loa out with a couple flying shoulder tackles. When Cobb missed a jumping elbow into the corner, he countered with a back body drop. Loa still wrestled like a crowd was there and pandered a lot, which came off awkward. Cobb landed a pump-handle suplex with a bridge for two, and later put Loa with Tour of the Islands to advance to the semi-finals.

David Finlay defeated Chase Owens

Nice match. Both looked good considering how long they’ve been away. On commentary, Kevin Kelly mentioned Owens has been training in 110-degree weather most days and has definitely transformed his body since earlier this year.

Owens floated from hold to hold working over Finlay over much of the match. Finlay came back with a big back elbow out of the corner. Owens responded later with a cool slingshot Billy Robinson backbreaker. When Owens went for his package piledriver finish, Finlay countered out of it and eventually put Owens away with an acid drop to win.  

Tama Tonga defeated Brody King

Fast action right at the top. King launched Tama Tonga high into the air with a flapjack, which was wild-looking, as Tonga is not a small wrestler.

King blasted Tonga a double-chop off the ropes. These two laid their strikes into each other all throughout this. Tonga rallied back and threw some mean facewash kicks at King; King responded with a huge overhead suplex into the turnbuckle.

In the end, Tonga was able to return the barrage of attacks from King and put him away with the Gun Stun. Really good match that deserves a longer rematch.

Final thoughts: 

Solid debut. It was essentially the same format as Lion’s Break Collision, it’s just that now the stakes are higher. Matches didn’t go much longer than ten minutes, and they were all mostly easy to watch. 

King vs. Tonga was best followed by KENTA vs. Fredericks. The weak points tonight were Alex Koslov’s commentary, who sounded like he’d never done it before, and the Jeff Cobb vs. Tonga Loa match, which felt rudimentary compared with the rest of the card and what viewers are used to from New Japan.

Next week: Jeff Cobb vs. KENTA, Tama Tonga vs. David Finlay