NJPW Strong results: FinJuice vs. JONAH & Bad Dude Tito

NJPW Strong: Rivals kicked off tonight in Hollywood. Ian Riccaboni is still subbing for regular NJPW Strong announcer Kevin Kelly, who is calling the New Japan Cup overseas this month.

TJP defeated Brogan Finlay via submission

TJP has a new look and vibe now since he joined United Empire. He goes by “The Public Enemy” and has longer hair and updated ring gear.

Newcomer Brogan Finlay, son of Fit and brother of David, got bullied by TJP. TJP gave Finlay a rough Otani-style face wash in the corner. Later in the match, Finlay channeled his father, Fit, and used a fireman’s carry roll on TJP, which earned him a two-count.

Towards the finish, Finlay decked TJP with a lariat, but both were down for the count. The crowd then started a 60–40 chant in favor of TJP. In the end, TJP connected with a Mamba Splash to Finlay’s back before locking in a modified STF. A number of fans were chanting “Tap! Tap!” at Finlay before he tapped out.

Afterwards, TJP got on the mic and called the crowd a bunch of “Silver Lake 5s” before stating that he is the best junior heavyweight alive. He explained how he’d already won the IMPACT X-Division and WWE Cruiserweight championships in the past, and that when he’d win the IWGP junior heavyweight title he’d be the first-ever “Triple Crown” junior heavyweight.

Before he was finished talking, a video flashed across the monitors with the phrase “KING OF THE ROPES” on it, and Mascara Dorada appeared at the ring entrance. He’s formerly known as Gran Metallik from WWE 205 Live and appeared in the WWE Cruiserweight Classic along with TJP. He got in TJP’s face. They got into it for a second, but TJP slipped out to the floor. Mascara Dorada teased diving onto TJP but instead bounced off the ropes and did a backflip onto his feet. It looks like these two will square off sometime this year on NJPW Strong.

Christopher Daniels defeated Karl Fredericks

This kicked ass. Seriously.

Fredericks was filling in for Gabriel Kidd, who was originally scheduled to wrestle Christopher Daniels.

Daniels offered his hand to Fredericks, who declined.

The crowd was pumped for this one. The two had a great exchange on the mat early on, building slowly to bigger and bigger spots. When Fredericks was gaining ground on offense, Daniels cut him off with a flapjack. He then suplexed the larger Fredericks in the air and brought him down gut-first onto his knee.

Daniels lit Fredericks up with chops. The crowd enjoyed his fire. They loved Daniels as well, and many fans kept shouting “SCU!” at him throughout the match. It wasn’t like this when Daniels faced Jay White at the same venue three months ago, there appeared to be different kinds of fans at this taping.

Fredericks landed a Shibata-style low dropkick, but Daniels responded later with a perfect Blue Thunder bomb. I don’t think I’m doing it justice in this write-up, but the smoothness and chemistry these two had with each other was excellent.

Daniels went for Angel’s Wings but Fredericks reversed it. When Fredericks missed a Stinger Splash in the corner, Daniels laid him out with a standing uranage before sticking a picture-perfect double-jump moonsault on the “Alpha Wolf” for the impressive win in just under ten minutes. For a TV match on a one-hour show, it doesn’t get much better than this. Quality stuff, people.

Daniels grabbed the mic and called Fredericks “a tough son of a bitch.” He said Fredericks had made both the LA Dojo and Mr. Shibata proud, and that if he ever wanted to run the match back he gladly would since Daniels thinks he’s “the future of this business.”

The two shook hands and Daniels thanked the crowd before both headed to the back.

JONAH & Bad Dude Tito defeated FinJuice (David Finlay & Juice Robinson)

Both teams brawled at the start. We saw a very “no-nonsense” version of FinJuice, or more so than usual, I guess. Juice connected with a big spinebuster that flattened Bad Dude Tito, then crashed into Tito with a running cannonball in the corner.

When Robinson went for a plancha onto the floor, JONAH caught him mid-air, then slammed him back-first against the ring post.

The finish saw FinJuice go for a Doomsday Device on Tito, but JONAH crotched Finlay on the top turnbuckle, then distracted referee Jeremy Marcus to keep him on the opposite side of the ring. With the ref’s back turned, Shane Haste, who is most recently known as Slapjack from WWE, dashed to the ring from out of nowhere to give Robinson a deadlift Tiger-into-backdrop suplex and disappear. Bad Dude Tito then dove off the top ropes with a frog splash that put Robinson away; Tito & JONAH are your winners.

Shane Haste came back to the ring to celebrate with the two. Haste tossed Robinson out of the ring. David Finlay ran back into the ring and started brawling with all three before they cornered him and took him out as well. Little brother Brogan Finlay, who we caught in the first match earlier on the show, arrived to help out but instead got mauled by JONAH, who crushed him with two big splashes off the top rope, as Tito and Haste held David Finlay on the ground, forcing him to watch JONAH destroy his younger brother. They didn’t formally announce it on the show but this faction seems as though it’ll be the latest iteration of TMDK, the group that Mikey Nicholls was also a member of. He’s the long-time tag team partner of Shane Haste and has been working sporadically for NJPW in recent years.

Final thoughts:

This was a great hour of pro wrestling. I thought Christopher Daniels vs. Karl Fredericks was the stand-out match, but the main event tag team brawl was really good as well and I think myself and many others would like to see more of this FinJuice vs. TMDK feud play out. But Daniels and Fredericks was outstanding, especially for a match that didn’t even go ten minutes.

Next week’s episode features another “U S of Jay” challenge match, plus Kevin Blackwood in his NJPW Strong debut vs. Ariya Daivari, and Bullet Club’s Hikuleo vs. Young Lion Kevin Knight in the opener.

NJPW Strong results: Tom Lawlor vs. Taylor Rust

Tonight’s episode of NJPW Strong was also the final installment of their New Beginning USA 2022 tapings from Seattle.

Karl Fredericks defeated Ethan HD

Good opener. Ethan HD is a 16-year Pacific-Northwest indie veteran. Seattle fans know him as one half of former DEFY Wrestling Tag Team champions, the Amerikan Gunz, alongside Mike Santiago.

This was a competitive match from beginning to end. They went hold for hold early on. Lots of chants for Fredericks from the crowd. Ian Riccaboni made a pretty brilliant point on commentary when he compared Karl Fredericks to a young Sting.That’s a perfect way of viewing him, from the athleticism to the charisma, there are lots of clear similarities.

Fredericks landed a Stinger splash before connecting with a Shibata-style running dropkick and jumping elbow for a two-count. Announcer Alex Koslov called HD “Ethan Page” by accident. When Ethan HD connected with a sudden springboard moonsault midway through the match, it jolted the crowd, who sounded like they went from 0–90 mph at this point. The venue was much louder from here on out.

Ethan HD earned a close two-count after using a Death Valley Bomb on Fredericks. They traded forearms. Fredericks caught Ethan HD with a spinebuster off the ropes, then spiked him with Manifest Destiny to put him away.

El Phantasmo defeated Matt Rehwoldt

If Taylor Rust wasn’t so damn good in the main event coming up after this, I’d have said Matt Rehwoldt was the MVP of the episode based on his performance here. This was a fun match made that much more interesting by Rehwoldt leaning into the heel role and letting El Phantasmo shine as an antihero.

Rehwoldt, who has both wrestled on and done commentary for Strong in the past, referred to Seattle as a “fog-covered craphole,” which set the crowd off. Boooo. Rehwoldt then said “Cobain had the right idea,” and that he couldn’t wait to get out of the region.

El Phantasmo grabbed the mic. “Watch your mouth! No one makes fun of this s***hole but me!” The crowd went wild. He called himself the King of the Pacific-Northwest and said it was “ELP Day” before Rehwoldt cut him off and attacked ELP, starting the match.

El Phantasmo used a smooth springboard hurricanrana that took Rehwoldt to the mat. ELP flashed his headbanga’ pose for the crowd, who ate it up. Rehwoldt answered back later with a Eddie Guerrero-style slingshot senton onto ELP. He flashed a pose of his own next, conducting the air and infuriating the crowd. Phantasmo became the de facto babyface. Rehwoldt took a bow in the middle of the ring while ELP caught his breath in the corner. The crowd began chanting “YOU SUCK!” at Rehwoldt. Phantasmo landed a Lionsault for two and the crowd chanted “EL-P” over and over.

Rehwoldt used a backrake on Phantasmo. That’s been Phantasmo’s recent specialty attack, so Rehwoldt gave him a taste of his own backrake medicine. He then connected with a swan dive from the top rope across the ring and scored a close nearfall. ELP fired back with his Sudden Death superkick, then planted Rehwoldt face-first with a CR II before pinning him after a swan dive of his own—a receipt for the backrake, no doubt!—and a double-jump moonsault. El Phantasmo picks up the win in just under ten minutes in a really fun match.

A quick vignette.of Team Filthy’s JR Kratos aired next. He called out Alex Coughlin, saying that if Coughlin thought that their last match on NJPW Strong was simply a one-and-done, he was wrong. Specifically, Kratos said Coughlin had “f*cked up.” He told Coughlin to watch his back before fading to black.

NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) (w/ West Coast Wrecking Crew) defeated Taylor Rust

This match was blow-the-bloody-doors-off good. If you watch the show regularly, you’d expect this to be good, but I don’t think many could have expected this match to be as intense and high-level as it was.

A promo package aired before the match explaining the feud between Lawlor and ex-Team Filthy member Rust. When Rust signed with WWE, Lawlor “fired” him from Team Filthy, particularly for his “white belt performance” loss to Jeff Cobb on the show in 2020. Rust returned to NJPW Strong late last year in Philadelphia looking for revenge on his ex-captain.

Tom Lawlor’s racking up a number of matches that are both really good but also all different. He doesn’t repeat himself or have a go-to schtick that we’re all waiting to see in every match. It makes writing about his matches a bit more exciting.

The first five minutes of the match were pretty much even on offense. Neither could get more leverage over the other until Lawlor dragon screwed Rust off the top turnbuckle to the middle of the ring. Lawlor slapped on a figure-four leglock, but Rust broke the hold with a rope break.

The match spilled out to the floor. Lawlor did the Filthy Strut before smashing Rust’s knee into the ring apron. Rust slammed Lawlor into the ring post.

Back in the ring, Lawlor locked on a sharpshooter until Rust grabbed the ropes for the break again. Rust connected with a jumping back enzuigiri at around the ten-minute mark. Both were knocked cold for a few moments.

When Lawlor escaped to the floor, Rust chased after and caught him with a tope suicida. Rust would later block Lawlor from coming off the top rope with a big pump kick before superplexing Lawlor from the top back into the ring. You could hear the crowd boiling.

The two got back to their feet and traded big forearm shots for a minute or so. The crowd loved it. Lawlor locked Rust in a standing triangle choke where Lawlor used the turnbuckle for support. Rust reversed it with a sit-out powerbomb for two. The crowd started chanting “This is awesome!”

Rust connected with his finish, The Perfect Circle, but Lawlor kicked out. Lawlor slammed Rust and showered down more forearms while he was still on the mat. Rust caught Lawlor with a flying armbar but Lawlor would quickly reverse. They kept reversing submission holds on the mat, with Rust catching Lawlor in armbars at different angles as Lawlor kept trying to escape.

Lawlor caught Rust with a low push-kick from behind that took out Rust’s sore knee. He then locked Rust in a straight jacket hold from behind before KO’ing him with a knee to the back of the head. Lawlor cinched in a sleeper, and after a few moments referee Jeremy Marcus called the match. Lawlor walked away victorious once again, retaining the Strong Openweight championship.

After the match, Lawlor got on the house mic and opened a challenge to anyone in the back for his next championship match. No one came out initially, but then PNW native and LA Dojo representative Clark Connors’ music hit.

Connors got right into Lawlor’s face and challenged him to a match right then and there. Lawlor got on the mic and called for a referee. They were going to do this right now. A ref came out and was handed the Strong Openweight title. Connors whipped off his Shawn Kemp jersey and looked ready to challenge for the title right then and there in khakis. When the new referee held the title belt in the air, Lawlor grabbed it from his hands and hopped out of the ring, then headed towards the exit with the West Coast Wrecking Crew. Jorel Nelson jacked Connors’ Shawn Kemp jersey wearing it and Connors’ beanie as Team Filthy left.

Final thoughts:

The New Beginning USA 2022 was one of the most effective series of shows the brand has had since forming. Having a live audience has made a world of difference, too, and it really showed at these tapings in Seattle.

Matt Rehwoldt and El Phantasmo had a really entertaining match where both were able to showcase more aspects of their craft because of how good the crowd response was. Rehwoldt has the capacity to be a really good heel if he wants to go that route.

The main event was another one of those matches where if more people watched, it would be the most talked about match of the week. Rust can be a big-time player in NJPW or probably anywhere. And Lawlor is becoming a main event machine, a Filthy Flair, you could say. His matches are always different and he somehow brings out the best in all of his opponents without compromising anything about himself or his wrestling. Or his shorts. But yeah, go out of your way to see this one.

NJPW announces press conference for June 8 regarding future events

New Japan Pro Wrestling is set to make an announcement soon in relation to future events.

The company announced this morning on social media that they will be holding an online press conference on Monday regarding future NJPW events. It will be held at 11:00 p.m. EST on NJPW World. 

NJPW President Harold Meij previously detailed a roadmap that would eventually lead to the return of live events. He said that they would only consider running shows until Japan lifts its country-wide state of emergency, the number of new infections decline, and when matches can take place in disinfected and safe settings. The emergency decleration was lifted for all parts of the country on May 25.

All NJPW wrestlers and staff will undergo extensive health checks when live events resume. NJPW’s parent company Bushiroad also recently announced that both NJPW and Stardom rosters will undergo COVID-19 antibody testing.

Shows are expected to be held both in Japan and at NJPW’s dojo in Los Angeles. NJPW has not run any shows since February 26, a New Japan Road event.