NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Semifinals

The NJPW G1 Climax 35 tournament reaches its penultimate night with semifinals action.

IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Zack Sabre Jr. and Konosuke Takeshita square off in the main event with a place in Sunday’s finals hanging in the balance. Sabre earned a bye into the semis with his first place finish in B Block, while Takeshita earned his way in with a win over David Finlay in the quarterfinals on Thursday.

Tonight’s other semifinals bout features EVIL vs. Yota Tsuji. EVIL earned his spot in the semis by finishing with the highest point total in A Block, while Tsuji defeated Shota Umino in Thursday’s quarterfinals to move on.

The winners of tonight’s bouts will square off tomorrow in the G1 finals with a spot in the Wrestle Kingdom main event potentially on the line. Last year’s G1 winner Sabre chose to cash in his title shot at King of Pro Wrestling last October rather than wait for the traditional January 4 Tokyo Dome challenge. Sabre defeated Tetsuya Naito for the IWGP World title last October.

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  • El Desperado, Ryusuke Taguchi, Shota Umino, YOSHI-HASHI & Yuya Uemura defeated Master Wato, Satoshi Kojima, Taichi, Toru Yano & YOH
  • House of Torture defeated Oleg Boltin & Tomoaki Honma
  • United Empire defeated El Phantasmo, Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima
  • Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi defeated War Dogs (David Finlay & Gedo)
  • House of Torture defeated War Dogs
  • House of Torture defeated TMDK
  • EVIL defeated Yota Tsuji
  • Konosuke Takeshita defeated Zack Sabre Jr.

Main Card – Tag Team Matches

El Desperado, Ryusuke Taguchi, Shota Umino, YOSHI-HASHI & Yuya Uemura defeated Master Wato, Satoshi Kojima, Taichi, Toru Yano & YOH

(Fun 10-man tag to open the show. Everyone hit their best strengths. Kojima and Taichi’s moments were a real chuckle, on par with Yano and Taguchi’s comedic proclivities.)

Uemura and Taichi locked up, with the former eating a big boot from the latter. Deep arm drag by Uemura saw Taichi dragged into the corners, with Umino soon on the receiving end of a kick. Kojima and Taichi had an awkward intense stare after Yano tagged himself in. Kojima eventually made it in, were he rained down chops on Umino’s chest.

YOSHI-HASHI and Desperado bore down on Kojima, who escaped to YOH. Suplexing Desperado, YOH dropped to one himself. Taguchi delivered two Funky Weapons to topple Wato. YOSHI-HASHI nearly tricked Taichi into taking out Kojima, who repeatedly tried shaking Taichi’s hand. Uemura and Umino coordinated to plummet Wato to the mat. Taguchi hit Wato with a Bomaye.

Desperado assisted Taguchi by slingshotting Wato and YOH onto the top rope. Wato fell down, while Desperado pulled YOH by the leg. Taguchi took advantage of the situation by rolling up Wato. Three taps later and Taguchi won the match for his comrades.

House of Torture (Don Fale & Yujiro Takahashi) defeated Oleg Boltin & Tomoaki Honma

(With his recent, crushing loss to EVIL in the G1 Climax A-Block coupled with this loss, there might be a slight change in Boltin. With commentary mentioning to keep an eye on Boltin’s post-match comments in the night, I wonder what it could be.)

A bitter Boltin didn’t even bother taking off his shirt or NEVER Openweight Championship; he charged Fale in the corner and chopped him down. Fale fired back with strikes but stumbled to his opponent’s dropkick. Fale dropped him with a charging lariat and tagged Takahashi in. Honma tagged in after his partner stunned Takahashi with a shotgun dropkick.

Takahashi rolled out of the way of Honma’s Kokeshi. Boltin halted Fale’s rampage for Honma to deliver one Kokeshi. Mid-Kokeshi, Fale caught Honma by the throat, hit him with a stiff clothesline, and an elbow drop for the pinfall.

Post-match: Fale and Takahashi dispatched an irate Boltin, with Fale faux-pinning his downed former opponent.

United Empire (Callum Newman, Great-O-Khan & Jakob Austin Young) defeated El Phantasmo, Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima

(Newman’s being positioned as the big star of this triumvirate while Khan’s longer tenure glues the group’s dynamics in place. This match was emblematic of that in the wake of departures like Jeff Cobb, Will Ospreay, and Aussie Open’s. Murashima is coming to his own, displaying more than intensity and drama; he’ll go far in NJPW.)

Khan grappled with the Ace, ultimately driving him into the corner. Tanahashi rebounded with a flying crossbody with further assist from Phantasmo and a senton by Murashima. Tanahashi, Phantasmo, and Murashima did an air guitar pose, the latter of which had such a good time doing it that he didn’t notice Young and Newman taking out his partners. After singlehandedly dispatching United Empire, Murashima resumed excitedly playing the air guitar until Tanahashi calmed him down.

Khan sat atop Tanahashi’s shoulders on the top rope, pressing his full weight. He pulled the Ace to the ring’s center for Mongolian chops that instantly fell his opponent. Phantasmo soared into the United Empire on the outside, dragging Khan back into the ring for a Senton + Lionsault combo. Scouting Phantasmo, Khan caught his Canadian opponent with a punch. Sturdy as he was, Newman flipped in the air by Murashima’s power, landing to Tanahashi’s Slingblade and Murashima’s bulldog powerslam.

Newman charged for Murashima, with some trouble. However, he inevitably sent the Young Lion on his back with a crushing Firebolt. This earned Newman and his United Empire co-horts the win.

Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi defeated War Dogs (David Finlay & Gedo)

(Unafilliated (LIJ) coming to Nagai’s aid more and more keeps me invested in this new iteration of the group. Post-Naito and BUSHI, its as though Takagi, Hiromu Takahashi, and Yota Tsuji are filling a void left behind and the hungry Nagai could be that foil.)

Finlay swiftly dragged Nagai to the ropes, where the pair struck the other with elbows in repetition. Ruthlessly, Finlay battered the Young Lion and hit him with a Senton. Spinning around Nagai atop his shoulders, Finlay dizzily stumbled to a tag with Gedo.

Nagai struggled back to his feet, grounded firmly by Gedo’s neck hold. Takagi tagged in, but had little luck when Gedo and Finlay unified their sights on him. Nagai came to Takagi’s aid, resulting in a plancha to Finlay. Gedo hit the ground stunned after Takagi’s Dangerous Driver. WAR Special locked in, Gedo submitted to the merciless hold of Takagi.

House of Torture (SANADA & Yoshinobu Kanemaru) defeated War Dogs (Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori)

(House of Torture win, but at least I got a kick out of Ishimori noticeably taking out Kanemaru on the outside away from the camera. Combined with the whiskey spray from the War Dogs and the sound the guitar made on Moloney popped me. That said, I hope the resulting blood wasn’t too serious. He staggered off in the end as it streamed down his face.)

SANADA was dressed from head to toe in a full-body reflective suit. Glimmering in the light, he looked like a human disco ball.

Both teams wasted no time as they brawled before and after the bell. Moloney and Ishimori went to work on Kanemaru in the corner. SANADA pulled Moloney away, bashing him against the hard, blue steel guardrails near the crowd. Kanemaru and SANADA applied pressure with their legs, driving Ishimori into the corner turnbuckle. Ishimori leapt to a comeback with a dropkick to Kanemaru.

Moloney with the tag, scouted SANADA’s each move temporarily downed him. Kanemaru prevented any follow-up courtesy of a leg pull. Ishimori equalized Kanemaru on the outside, loudly and off-camera. SANADA clutched the referee when Moloney hoped to suplex him. Kanemaru sought to spray whiskey in Moloney’s eye but he ducked in time. The War Dogs imbibed the whiskey, spraying it into the House of Torture. SANADA blasted Moloney’s skull with his guitar, deeply embedding it. This earned House of Torture a pin.

House of Torture (DOUKI, Ren Narita & SHO) defeated TMDK (Hartley Jackson, Kosei Fujita & Ryohei Oiwa)

(Fujita and Oiwa didn’t get much time, but Jackson put up a valiant effort. I wasn’t a fan of this match once it became clear and predictable, try as everyone might.)

House of Torture struck Fujita and Oiwa, but had a hard time with Jackson. SHO and DOUKI bullied Fujita on the outside. Narita added to this in the ring, driving Fujita’s head along the rope. DOUKI overwhelmed the exhausted and worn Fujita, capitalizing with a double-stomp. Wearily, Fujita turned the tables at last with a dropkick.

Oiwa blasted off with a fury, dropkicking Narita and punishing him with utmost focus on the left arm. Even though he raked Oiwa in the eye, he found himself again in the throes of agony courtesy of another arm hold. SHO joined Narita to torment Oiwa, both men dropped to a double-clothesline.

Jackson threw his weight at Narita. Suffering knee targeting, Jackson’s friends aided him into landing a senton on Narita. Clinging the referee to the rope, Narita distracted him so SHO might harm Jackson more with a wrench. Thanks to this, a poke in the eye, and DOUKI’s pipe, House of Torture quelled Jackson’s Jagged Edge. Narita locked in a figure-four leglock to tap Jackson out.

G1 Climax Semifinal Matches

EVIL defeated Yota Tsuji

(Disappointed with the finish. It feels like a crime. And voice my misgivings as I might, I think there’s nothing stopping NJPW from booking EVIL versus Zack Sabre Jr at Wrestle Kingdom 20.)

Tsuji got the better of EVIL initially, but Dick Togo pulled him into the steel guardrail outside. EVIL flung him into it, toppling over someone in a production desk. Wrapping a microphone around Tsuji’s neck, EVIL demanded he declar him the winner. Shingo Takagi and Daiki Nagai joined Tsuji’s side to urge him back up. There htey stayed through the match.

EVIL hoped to take advantage of the recent woes he inflicted on Tsuji, but he persevered. Sinking in a figure-four leglock, EVIL inevitably relinquished his hold. Hurling his opponent in the corner, he powerbombed the limping Tsuji. The two battled for a vertical suplex, with Tsuji grittily pulling through.

In his spirited comeback, Tsuji chopped down EVIL. In his ire, EVIL beamed Tsuji into and over the steel guardrail. Dick Togo kicked Tsuji’s leg into the barricade and fled behind Don Fale after Shingo Takagi gave chase. EVIL cinched in a deep Darkness Scorpion. Red-faced and unrelenting, Tsuji dramatically gripped a rope break.

Tsuji curb stomped EVIL, earning him enough time for a reprieve. A Spanish Fly begat an urgent rebound by Tsuji, leading EVIL to fling the referee in the way of a Gene Blaster. With the referee incapacitated, Fale and Togo frantically took out Nagai and Takagi so they could assault Tsuji. EVIL’s allies and Tsuji’s allies gave each other low blows. Tsuji and EVIL traded counter after counter. Attempting to send EVIL from the top rope, Tsuji tragically fell to Fale’s low blow. EVIL locked in one last Darkness Scorpion, enough to render Tsuji unconscious.

Post-match: Referee Kenta Sato rejected Takagi and Nagai’s appeals to overturn the finish, as Tsuji hadn’t tapped out.

Konosuke Takeshita defeated Zack Sabre Jr.

(Takeshita pulled out a miracle here. Off the cusp of the last match, he became Western fans’ last hope against EVIL with this win. Admittedly, NJPW should be investing more in their younger stock; they’ve quite an impressive crop to do so with. However, Takeshita makes his NJPW dates, and does more than I think most people realize. He is contracted to NJPW, after all. Him winning the G1 and potentially the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship would not be a bad call.)

Sabre started off this rematch by getting the best of Takeshita. However, the Alpha reversed this with a shoulder hold of his own. Sabrearms were tied around his neck as he struggled to maintain calmness. Soon, Sabre shouldered Takeshita to send him down. There, he cranked the arm of his opponent and bent his fingers back. Takeshita wriggled to a rope break.

Sabre aimed for a Penalty Kick on the ring apron, but Takeshita countered him with a DDT to the floor ringside. A German Suplex rendered Sabre momentarily stunned, and a flying shoulder tackle brought him back down. Sabre dodged Takeshita’s knee, kicking the back of it as he did so. To rub salt in the wound, he tied Takeshita’s weak leg against a bottom rope. Following a modified stretch to agonize it further, Sabre stomped on the knee.

Takeshita’s adrenaline propelled him to demolish Sabre with two consecutive exploder suplexes. Sabre snatched a comeback as he clutched an armbar. This essened the affect of a lariat. Out of nowhere, Sabre survived a Blue Thunderbomb to engage a triangle choke. Takeshita wept for frantic rope break attempts as Sabre tied his legs together. A loud clap followed a Rolling Elbow from Takeshita. He stole a Zack Driver to no avail. Desperately, Sabre tried many different holds and pins, but Takeshita escaped via a German suplex.

Sabre avoided a knee, landing a Zack Driver followed by an armbar. He maintained this with urgency as Takeshita miraculously earned a rope break. A lariat overturned Sabre’s Penalty Kick. The men sparred with Sabre slapping the taste out of Takeshita’s mouth. On the top turnbuckle, Sabre maintained a hold on Takeshita’s left arm but fell to the mat in Takeshita’s transitioned Raging Fire. A Powerdrive Knee and another Raging Fire tore Sabre apart for the pinfall.

Post-match: The entire House of Torture spilled to ringside. EVIL teased entering the ring, but smugly backed away and his lackeys joined him.

(I stress again the urgency of elevating the young, hot talent. So many could’ve qualified for the playoffs, semifinals, and finals. EVIL, no matter what his popularity in Japan may or may not be, should not be in this position in 2025. Hope beyond hope, Takeshita’s NJPW schedule could see him be a bigger deal in AEW and NJPW. The stars of the past cannot be relied on forever, especially in today’s wildly changing wrestling climate.)

NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: B Block’s final night

The G1 Climax 35 playoffs will be set following today’s final night of B Block action in Hamamatsu.

The top three in B Block following today’s show will advance to the playoffs, with the top points total earning a bye into Saturday’s semifinals. Seven competitors remain mathematically alive heading into the show, with only one wrestler having secured their playoff spot in the Block.

In today’s main event, Konosuke Takeshita faces Ren Narita. Both stand at 10 points entering today, and the winner is guaranteed to make the playoffs.

Shota Umino (10 points) faces Great-O-Khan (8 points) in the semi-main event. Umino makes the playoffs with a win, while O-Khan needs a win and help to make the next round.

Zack Sabre Jr. takes on YOSHI-HASHI in tonight’s second tournament bout. Sabre has already secured a playoff spot and will be wrestling for a bye, while YOSHI-HASHI is mathematically eliminated from contention.

Shingo Takagi (8 points) and Drilla Moloney (8 points) square off in tonight’s first tournament bout. Both need to win and need help to have a chance at the playoffs.

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  • Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima defeated Masatora Yasuda & Taichi
  • TMDK defeated United Empire
  • Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated House Of Torture
  • Daiki Nagai & Yota Tsuji defeated Shoma Kato & Yuya Uemura
  • House Of Torture defeated War Dogs
  • Shingo Takagi defeated Drilla Moloney
  • Zack Sabre Jr. defeated YOSHI-HASHI
  • Shota Umino defeated Great-O-Khan
  • Konosuke Takeshita defeated Ren Narita

Main Card – Tag Team Matches

Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima defeated Masatora Yasuda & Taichi

Taichi spent the early half dominating Murashima. Yasuda continued that offense, but Murashima laid him flat for a hot Tanahashi tag. Taichi kept the Ace occupied at ringside. Meanwhile, Yasuda grounded Murashima with a Lion Tamer. Murashima slammed Yasuda and tapped him out with a Boston Crab.

TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Ryohei Oiwa) defeated United Empire (Callum Newman & Jakob Austin Young)

(Either it’s temporary frustration or a change in personality for Newman, but I do wonder what’s coming next for him. He needs a shakeup so maybe this disappointment is what’s needed to mix things up.)

Newman’s injuries and exhaustion from the G1 Climax kept him slow against the spry Oiwa. Young attempted to keep Jackson away, resulting only in stunned confusion; Newman kicked him to ringside. Jackson made a hot tag, squashing Newman under his own girth. Young too sustained this damage from Jackson after Oiwa offered a scoop slam. Jackson pinned Young following a Jagged Edge.

Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated House Of Torture (SANADA & Yoshinobu Kanemaru)

(This finish was the perfect combination of Boltin’s Superman and Yano’s Deadpool. Using their chemistry made this an entertaining short bout.)

House of Torture immediately cut down their opponents. Kanemaru took advantage of Yano’s turnbuckle antics to attack his knee. Elsewhere, SANADA left Boltin in a heap of chairs amid the audience. Boltin double-suplexed SANADA and Kanemaru, swinging the former in his patented Boltin Shake. SANADA attempted a Skull End and an inside cradle, but both failed as Boltin lightly tossed him through a side suplex. Unwisely, Kanemaru sought a flying crossbody, but Boltin caught him and lent him to Yano for a roll-up pinfall.

Daiki Nagai & Yota Tsuji defeated Shoma Kato & Yuya Uemura

(This was the right move, keeping Tsuji on track and giving hope as opposed to sowing doubt. As for Uemura, he sold the dejection of delivering everything to the tournament just to fail, so well.)

Nagai and Tsuji kept Kato isolated, keeping him flat while knocking Uemura from the corner. A spirited comeback for Uemura saw Tsuji bulldogged onto the mat. Kato made a desperate crawl to escape a Boston Crab, but Tsuji transitioned it into a stretch that tapped out the Young Lion.

House Of Torture (Dick Togo & EVIL) defeated War Dogs (David Finlay & Gedo)

(I’m not asking for much, just that we get a Finlay win over EVIL. Or at least a clean finish in their upcoming Block-A match. I know that’s like throwing a wish to a brick wall, but I’m begging.)

House of Torture abused the War Dogs before the bell could ring, with EVIL driving Finlay through the chairs in the crowd. Don Fale joined the affair, battering Finlay on the barricade. EVIL choked Finlay with the tag rope. Finlay swung a comeback with a Northern Irish Curse. EVIL sought to interrupt Gedo’s momentum, but was choked by Finlay instead. Fale hit Gedo with his Grenade, giving Togo the pinfall.

G1 Climax B-Block Matches

Shingo Takagi (10) defeated Drilla Moloney (8)

(The match did well to position Moloney as a next-up guy. Meanwhile, shining Takagi up as a legend who still has a fire burning deep within his soul is the move at this point. Excellent B-Block opener before the playoffs. Moloney was on fire for this year’s tournament.)

Moloney showed glimpses of hope after the bell, but Takagi got the upper hand at ringside, throwing the War Dog into barricades. The men then battled in the sea of chairs hastily abandoned by the crowd. Evenly matched, the seasoned Takagi unsheathed a lariat, returning control to his favor. A wrathful Moloney quelled Takagi’s momentum with a Spinebuster. Takagi struck Moloney with a Made in Japan. Evading a lariat, Takagi struck with a sliding Pumping Bomber to Moloney’s back. He responded to Takagi with a Piledriver. Having dropped Moloney with a Pumping Bomber, Takagi followed with a Last of the Dragon to defeat Moloney.

Zack Sabre Jr. (14) defeated YOSHI-HASHI (8)

(Well done. Very well done. YOSHI-HASHI’s been an underrated part of the G1 Climax, even after being eliminated. Paired with the personal story of avenging Hirooki Goto against the man who won the title back from him, YOSHI-HASHI put on a match of the night contender.)

Right out of the gate, YOSHI-HASHI and Sabre collided. Sabre soon gained control of YOSHI-HASHI’s legs. YOSHI-HASHI agonized during Sabre’s transition to torturing his wrist. YOSHI-HASHI turned the tides, eventually impacting Sabre with a dropkick. They fought across the barricades outside. YOSHI-HASHI returned the match in his favor with a Headhunter.

Sabre worked YOSHI-HASHI’s arm. YOSHI-HASHI landed a stiff lariat that rattled the IWGP World Heavyweight Champion. YOSHI-HASHI scored a nearfall with a Kumagoroshi. Sabre wrenched YOSHI-HASHI’s arms back. Ushigoroshi and a superkick rendered Sabre mat-prone, punctuated by Loose Explosion. YOSHI-HASHI snared Sabre’s arm in an extensioned, but the Brit reversed it, ultimately pulling it back until YOSHI-HASHI submitted.

Shota Umino (12) defeated Great-O-Khan (6)

(Fine match. The Hamamatsu, Shizuoka crowd wasn’t as on-fire for this one as the previous two B-Block matches tonight. That said, this match was what it needed to be, a settling between Umino and Khan, not demanding to be some epic.)

Khan overwhelmed Umino quickly, with the latter narrowly escaping an Eliminator. At ringside, Khan delivered Mongolian chops prior to slingshotting Umino to the blue steel guardrails. As though that were not enough, he sent Umino through the chairs before a dispersed crowd. Khan continually slammed Umino, maintaining a lock on his neck. Umino finally rebounded with a Tornado-DDT.

Khan recovered with a Tenzan Tombstone to daze Umino. Though Umino withstood a flying right hook, he escaped Khan’s claw to discharge a powerbomb. Khan turned Umino’s Northern Lights Suplex to a cradle. Umino turned the page to a Second Chapter for the win over Khan.

Main Event G1 Climax B-Block

Konosuke Takeshita (12) defeated Ren Narita (10)

(This may be one of my favorite House of Torture comeuppances. Takeshita was a warrior, through and through. At times, this match left me breathless. By no means was it Omega/Okada or Steamboat/Flair, but it was a thrill. Credit to Walker Stewart as well, for he brought out something akin to Jim Ross. He truly helped elevate the match. Fantastic main event.)

True to House of Torture fashion, Narita found a prompt advantage with his allies battering Konosuke Takeshita and Rocky Romero of The Don Callis Family. Somehow holding a stoic rage, Takeshita charged in, but fell back to Narita’s boot.

Takeshita fired back with repeated knees to Narita’s jaw. Within the sea of the Hamamatsu crowd, Narita tormented Takeshita, tossing him into chairs. He even slammed Takeshita’s knee with a steel chair. Unsatisfied, Narita swung Takeshita’s knee into the ringpost, where his co-horts added to the damage.

Returning to his technical roots, Narita held his opponent in a submission, to which Takeshita countered into a Brainbuster. Sneakily stealing the control of the match, Narita resumed abusing Takeshita’s knee. The Alpha rallied back with a lariat. Aiming for a German suplex, Takeshita instead was sent into the referee. Don Fale struck Takeshita with a chair whereas Dick Togo choked him with a wire. Romero dispatched both men.

Takeshita downed Narita with an elbow. A tope suicida decimated Narita and his legion of horribles. An Exploder Suplex toppled Narita, as did a Powerdrive Knee. Yoshinobu Kanemaru jammed a bottle of whiskey into the back of Takeshita’s knee. Narita once more returned to stretching Takeshita’s leg. Tapping one time for adrenaline, Takeshita broke the hold with a hasty rope grab. Refusing to stay down, Takeshita plummeted Narita with a Last Ride. Showing great ring awareness, Takeshita yanked his arm from a Kanemaru intrusion and ducked a mist of whiskey to choke Narita into unconsciousness with a Crossface Chickenwing for a triumphant victory.

G1 Climax Playoff Update

Shota Umino and Yota Tsuji face off on August 14. The winner of that match will face EVIL on August 16.

Konosuke Takeshita and David Finlay face off on August 14. The winner of that match will face Zack Sabre Jr. on August 16.

(With the exception of Shota Umino versus Great-O-Khan, the B-Block matches tonight were a blast. YOSHI-HASHI’s last stand against Sabre was an emotional thrill, whereas Takeshita overcoming the odds of House of Torture provided a catharsis to end the night. Those are the matches to watch in terms of quality; Shingo Takagi versus Drilla Moloney is just an added bonus.)

NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Konosuke Takeshita vs. Shota Umino

The NJPW G1 Climax 35 tournament reaches the home stretch today with a B Block show from Yokohama Budokan.

Konosuke Takeshita faces Shota Umino in the main event of today’s show, the next-to-last night of B Block action. With only the top three point totals advancing to the playoffs, Umino needs a victory to control his tournament future. He enters the bout with 8 points in a four-way tie for fourth place. Takeshita has 10 points as part of a three-way tie atop the B Block.

Shingo Takagi faces Ren Narita in the semi-main event today. Shingo enters the bout with 6 points in a two-way tie for eighth place in the 10-person block. Narita has 10 points.

IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Zack Sabre Jr. and his 10 points take on Drilla Moloney and his 8 points in tonight’s second tournament bout.

YOSHI-HASHI with 8 points faces the mathematically eliminated El Phantasmo and his 6 points in tonight’s first tournament matchup.

A series of tag matches previewing Sunday’s A Block card fill out today’s undercard. The show streams live on NJPW World beginning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time.

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  • Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated Masatora Yasuda & Taichi
  • House Of Torture defeated TMDK by disqualification
  • Daiki Nagai & Yota Tsuji defeated United Empire
  • House Of Torture defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima
  • Tomoaki Honma & Yuya Uemura defeated Bullet Club War Dogs
  • El Phantasmo defeated YOSHI-HASHI
  • Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Drilla Moloney
  • Shingo Takagi defeated Ren Narita
  • Shota Umino defeated Konosuke Takeshita

Main Card – Tag Team Matches

Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated Masatora Yasuda & Taichi

(Taichi convincingly looked dejected, despite striking hard and true. Boltin certainly looks more confident in the G1 Climax since last year.)

Taichi led Yasuda in a united front against Boltin, but he overpowered his way out. Yano removed a turnbuckle pad, propelling Yasuda into its corner. It wasn’t easy, but Yasuda toppled Boltin with a hurricanrana and a dropkick.

Taichi directed a kick to Yano, who tumbled out of the ring. Boltin unleashed a belly-to-belly suplex to Taichi. An Axe Bomber was his response. Yano sent Yasuda down with a slam. Yasuda silently agreed to Taichi slamming him onto Yano. Yasuda fell victim to a successful schoolboy pin, losing the match.

House Of Torture (SANADA & Yoshinobu Kanemaru) defeated TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Ryohei Oiwa) by disqualification

(I admit, I’m a sucker for the classic Guerrero style antics.)

Oiwa outwrestled SANADA’s grapple attempts. Offering his hand to shake, SANADA watched as Oiwa was taken to the barricade by Kanemaru whereas Jackson retaliated against SANADA. Into the crowd SANADA dragged Oiwa, ruthlessly beating him with a defenseless water bottle.

Kanemaru and SANADA clobbered Oiwa in the corner. Jackson attempted to garner a comeback with a Jagged Edge but SANADA pulled the referee in to complicate it. Evoking the spirit of Eddie Guerrero, SANADA slapped his trusty acoustic guitar, tossed it to Jackson, and lay on the mat. The referee caught Jackson holding the guitar (despite sheepishly hiding it behind his back. TMDK was then disqualified.

Daiki Nagai & Yota Tsuji defeated United Empire (Callum Newman & Jakob Austin Young)

(I’m stoked for Newman and Tsuji on August 10’s series of A-Block matches. Here’s to hoping nothing too worrisome is afflicting Young.)

Newman had the advantage with high speed and lucha libre offense, yet fell onto Tsuji’s knees once caught. Nagai maintained his team’s control with a dropkick to Young. He retorted with one of his own. Tsuji dropped Newman with a scoop slam and jumped on his prone opponent. A Gene Blaster by Tsuji put Young away for the pinfall.

Post-match: United Empire attacked Tsuji and Nagai. Tsuji dragged Newman to the front. Young was already taken to the back; he had to be checked on earlier in the match.

House Of Torture (Dick Togo & EVIL) defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi & Katsuya Murashima

A generous EVIL offered to fight fair for Tanahashi’s final G1 Climax season.

(Okay, they actually did it. House of Torture put on a clean match. I fully expect this to not be the case tomorrow and will probably be proven wrong. But for all intents and purposes, this was an enjoyable change of pace with a huge subversion of expectation.)

Seemingly true to his word, EVIL asked Togo not to interfere in the early goings. Tanahashi and Murashima took turns tagging in to work Togo’s arm. Murashima caught Don Fale attempting to distract him, to which EVIL instructed Fale to back away. Togo nearly resorted to underhanded tactics, but thought better of it.

Murashima hoped to work EVIL’s leg, but ate a lariat for his efforts. Togo kept Tanahashi on the outside as EVIL locked in a Darkness Scorpion to Murashima, tapping him out.

Post-match: EVIL shook Tanahashi’s hand as Fale and Togo evacuated. Both teams parted ways amicably.

Tomoaki Honma & Yuya Uemura defeated Bullet Club War Dogs (David Finlay & Gedo)

(Finlay’s epic G1 comeback clashes against Uemura’s strong performance thus far come August 10. Their interactions may not have invested me in this match, but this head-to-head clash still compels me to wait in anticipated breath for the next round of A Block matches.)

Uemura looked to have Finlay’s number, wearing him down for Honma’s Kokeshi, which ultimately failed. Gedo worked on Honma’s face, but he and Finlay missed their own stolen Kokeshi. The veteran finally landed a Kokeshi on both fallen opponents. Finlay plopped Uemura with a Backbreaker, lending him to Gedo for his patented Gedo Clutch.

Uemura pulled Gedo in for a Deadbolt, but he escaped only for a deep arm drag. Armbar then in place, Uemura tapped Gedo out for the victory.

G1 Climax B-Block Matches

El Phantasmo (6) defeated YOSHI-HASHI (8)

(There wasn’t much sauce to this match. Both are entertaining wrestlers, but there was no heightened drama or stakes, nor any levity. The Kanagawa fans in attendance may have enjoyed this, but I did not so much. Not bad by any stretch, just painfully average.)

YOSHI-HASHI locked in with Phantasmo, leading to a struggle between the two. Phantasmo kicked YOSHI-HASHI to the outside and followed with a plancha. He leapt to a moonsault from the top rope to YOSHI-HASHI on the outside, who evaded just in time. This rattled Phantasmo’s legs momentarily.

Phantasmo confidently planted YOSHI-HASHI with a Brainbuster. YOSHI-HASHI turned the tide with a dropkick and a baseball kick to render Phantasmo horizontal. Phantasmo fired back with a springboard senton and a springboard moonsault. YOSHI-HASHI returned fire with a dragon suplex and a lariat. He aimed for an Ushigoroshi but failed.

Panic settled in the wrestlers as they urgently pulled out their deepest moves. Phantasmo landed a CR2 to no avail. He then plummetted YOSHI-HASHI with a Burning Hammer. A Thunderkiss ’85 put away YOSHI-HASHI for good, gifting Phantasmo the pinfall.

Zack Sabre Jr. (12) defeated Drilla Moloney (8)

(Sabre’s mixture of technical wrestling, mocking attitude, and cunning makes him dangerous and this match exemplifies this. Moloney’s a powerful beast, but when up against calmer, out-thinking opponents, that won’t account for much.)

Moloney powered out of Sabre’s rapid succession of holds after the bell. However, Sabre regained and maintained control with utmost flexibility with a headlock takedown. Moloney suplanted this with headscissor holds and a short piledriver.

Sabre mockingly tossed his forearm repeatedly into Moloney’s jaw, resulting in the latter throwing in a louder, thunderous forearm to stagger him. Moloney attempted to counter a Zack Driver, only to have his neck twisted by Sabre’s ankles.

The maintained control held by Sabre soon ended with a sit-out piledriver and a Gore. Baiting Moloney into a forearm exchange, Sabre surprised him with a Zack Driver and moved to working onhis arm. In the nick of time, Moloney caught a Penalty Kick, using it to land a powerbomb. He sought to do another one, but Sabre took advantage of Moloney’s weakened bicep, tapping him out in a triangle hold.

Shingo Takagi (8) defeated Ren Narita (10)

(So much happened in this match and I only covered half of it. Takagi and Narita had an action-filled thrill ride that commanded full attention the whole way through.)

Yoshinobu Kanemaru shocked Takagi from the darkness to batter him on the outside.

Enjoying this reversal of fortune, Narita flung Takagi into the chairs before the fans. He clobbered Takagi’s knees with steel chairs and left him for dead in a canyon of chairs. Desperately hobbling to the ring, Takagi collapsed once more thanks to Kanemaru attacking the leg en route to the ring.

Narita tied Takagi’s leg to the rope, pulling hard to strain the knee. Fortunately for him, Daiki Nagai came to his aid by pulling Narita to the outside. Referee Marty Asami fell into Takagi as he hyped up the crowd. Kanemaru took advantage of this with a chair shot. Takagi dropped Narita from the top rope as blood cascaded from his nose. Narita quelled Takagi’s providence with a hold to aggravate the already soft knee.

Takagi nearly choked out Narita for the win, had it not been for Kanemaru ringing the bell. A low-blow and Made in Japan almost gave Takagi the win, but Kanemaru pulled Asami away from the pin. He then attempted to spray whiskey in Takagi’s eyes. Nagai stopped Narita from using his board. Takagi successfully pinned Narita after a Last of the Dragon.

Main Event G1 Climax B-Block

Shota Umino (8) defeated Konosuke Takeshita (10)

(Takeshita has more than proven his ability to deliver classic matches in NJPW. But here, Umino felt like a star. His perseverance and heart won out after a grueling battle where tenacity overcame the stoic, yet raging wildfire that is Takeshita.

Takeshita quickly proved indominatable against the tenacity of Umino. He then went to work on Umino’s neck. Umino turned the tables with a fisherman’s suplex but the Brainbuster he took the prior day took effect. He sent Takeshita a-whirling with two dragon screw legwhips. Takeshita endured stomps to his knee and stumbled mid-Irish Whip.

Umino went for a facelock and drove Takeshita’s knee into the mat. Takeshita caught Umino and wrenched control with a powerbomb and an STF. At ringside, Umino dispatched Takeshita’s knee onto the floor and delivered a hateful lariat across the barricade. Takeshita dropped Umino on the hard blue floor among the crowd with a Brainbuster. Narrowly beating the 20-count on way to the ring, Umino was instantly greeted with a lariat.

Umino heaved Takeshita with a fisherman’s suplex, met by a German suplex by Takeshita. A Tornado-DDT gave him further room for control. Takeshita weathered a heated forearm exchange to send Umino spiraling from the top rope. Umino replied with a superplex in the corner. Snapping Umino’s neck, Takeshita reeled his opponent in for a Crossface Chickenwing. Faded, but not out, Umino weakly kicked out of a pin. A Blue Thunderbomb couldn’t even do the trick.

Catching Takeshita’s leg mid-kick, Umino knocked Takeshita down with a lariat. Takeshita countered Umino’s Second Chapter into a Brainbuster. A second attempt at a Second Chapter did the trick, with Umino getting the win over the Alpha.

(The B-Block stumbled at first, but each match progressively improved on the last. If Umino continues with matches like this, I’ll be a fan again.

NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Yota Tsuji vs. David Finlay

The NJPW G1 Climax 35 tournament continues today at a sold out Korakuen Hall for an A Block show.

In the main event, Yota Tsuji faces David Finlay. Tsuji is part of a five-way-tie for first place in A Block with 8 points, while Finlay is part of the five-way-tie for sixth place with his 6 points. Finlay must win to have a chance to advance to the playoffs. Tsuji has won three of their four previous singles matches.

Yuya Uemura faces Ryohei Oiwa in the semi-main event in a battle of two of NJPW’s hopeful next generation of stars. Both have 8 points entering today’s card.

Hiroshi Tanahashi faces SANADA in another A Block battle on the show. Each has 6 points and must win to remain alive in the tournament. This will be their eighth career singles meeting, with SANADA holding a 4-3 edge.

EVIL faces Boltin Oleg in another matchup of two wrestlers with 8 points each.

Taichi and Callum Newman square off in the night’s first tournament bout, with both sitting at 6 points and needing a victory to salvage any playoffs hopes.

Today’s show streams on NJPW World beginning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time.

**********

Live from a sold out Korakuen Hall in Tokyo.

Walker Stewart & Chris Charlton were on commentary.  

Jado & El Phantasmo defeated Shoma Kato & YOSHI-HASHI (5:37)

YOSHI-HASHI superkicked Phantasmo into a bodyslam from Kato for a near fall. Kato tried to get a pin with a backslide, but ELP rolled through right into a C2 for the win. After the match, ELP put his Television Title belt on the shoulder of Aaron Wolf who was standing at ringside. He then took it back and put it on the shoulder of a young fan in the crowd.

Zach Sabre, Jr. & Hartley Jackson defeated Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori (7:32)

Ishimori did a fantastic job overselling a senton from Jackson. Ishimori dodged an avalanche in the corner to get the tag to Moloney. Moloney no-sold an avalanche and slammed Jackson, then popped Sabre with a right hand. Ishimori went for a roll up but Sabre countered into a rollup with a back bridge to get the pinfall. Moloney & ZSJ went nose-to-nose after the match.

Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Ren Narita vs. Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi (6:40) 

The House of Torture team jumped the Unaffiated team before the bell rang.  Narita and Shigo brawled right into the crowd and Takagi got the advantage and the crowd behind him. Back in the ring, Takagi took down both his opponents with a double clothesline. Nagai got the tag and Kanemaru got a near fall with a suplex. Takagi ran in with a clothesline on Kanemaru to set up a spinebuster from Nagai. Kanemaru locked Nagai in a Boston Crab for the submission. Of course, the House of Torture guys jumped Tagaki after the match; Kanemaru spat whiskey in his face and Narita hit him with a push-up bar. 

Rocky Romero & Konosuke Takeshita defeated Tomoaki Honma & Shota Umino (5:35)

Honma did not move around well out there. Honma missed a headbutt on Takeshita. Romero took out Umino on the floor. Takeshita and Romero tried to doubleteam Honma but Umino broke it up. Honma tried for a running headbutt, but he ran right into a forearm from Takeshita. Takeshita locked in a crossface chicken wing on Honma for the submission. 

After the match, Takeshita and Umino went at it and brawled into the crowd, and Takeshita dropped Umino with a brainbuster on the floor. Umino had to be helped to the back, casting the chances of tomorrow’s main event of Takeshita v. Umino in doubt.

Now time for the A Block matches, where everyone has either 6 points or 8 points. We should start to get some separation in the field after tonight… right?

Callum Newman (4-3, 8 pts) defeated Taichi (3-4, 6 pts) (12:48)

Taichi was eliminated from the playoffs with a loss. This match told a tremendous story, as this was essentially an elimination match for both guys. It was a war of attrition where both guys took the best shots the other had to offer and kept refusing to go down.

Taichi and Newman exchanged kicks for the first three minutes of that match. Taichi laid in two really solid ones that knocked Newman down. He tried to kip up, but crumpled back down. Newman then floored Taichi with a forearm. Taichi rocked Newman with a forearm, then snapped his head back with a kick. Taichi went to take off his long pants, but Newman stopped him, pulled off Taichi’s long pants himself, and then spat in his face. Taichi then absolutely leveled him with a forearm. 

Taichi hit a backdrop suplex for a near fall. Newman caught Taichi with a solid shot to the ribs and Taichi sold it like he’d been shot. Newman followed that up with a sliding knee, and came off the top with a double stomp for a near fall. 

Newman went for a springboard cutter, but Taichi caught him with a forearm to the back. Taichi followed up with an Axe Bomber, and a lariat got a near fall. Newman escaped a back suplex and caught Taichi with a dropkick. Newman hit a v-trigger and poisoned rana. Newman hit Taichi with what looked like a single underhook death rider, but Taichi sat up before Newman could cover. Newman followed up with a kamigoya. Taichi, even though he realized he was done, spat in Newman’s face! Newman finished Taichi off with another modified death rider for the pinfall.

EVIL (5-3, 10 pts) (w/ Don Fale & Dick Togo) defeated Boltin Oleg (4-4, 8pts) (9:46)  

There were times where it looked like Oleg would overcome the 3-on-1 advantage the House of Torture had, but it was not to be. This House of Torture stuff is literally torture to sit through. 

Of course the House of Torture guys jump Oleg before the match. Fale and Togo set up a table on the floor for EVIL to ram Oleg’s head into. Back in the ring, EVIL hit a fisherman’s suplex for a near fall. Oleg ran through EVIL with a tackle, but Fale tripped up Oleg when he ran the ropes. EVIL dragged Oleg into the crowd. 

While in the crowd,  EVIL and Togo went for a double suplex. Oleg escaped and floored EVIL with a chop. Oleg drug both EVIL and Togo back to ringside. Back in the ring, EVIL caught Oleg with a pair of lariats, but he wouldn’t go down. Oleg hit a belly to belly and a fireman’s carry slam for a near fall. Oleg hit a pop-up F5.

EVIL trapped the ref in the corner and Oleg accidentally hit him with an avalanche. The ref was out, which set up more interference from Togo and Fale. Fale put Oleg through a table with a splash off the middle rope. A new ref came to the ring, and EVIL put Oleg away with Everything is Evil. EVIL pinned Oleg in pieces of the table. 

Hiroshi Tanahashi (4-4, 8 pts) defeated SANADA (3-4, 6 pts) (2:37)

This was another must-win match for both guys and with his loss, SANADA is elimiated from the playoffs.

Tanahashi gave SANADA an opening early when he played his air guitar, and SANADA slid in with a knee. SANADA missed a moonsault. Tanahashi went to the top for the High Fly Flow, but SANADA pushed the ref into the ropes, causing Tanahashi to crash to the mat and the ref to crash to the floor.  With the ref down, SANADA grabbed his guitar and just murdered Tanahashi with a guitar shot to the head. Don’t they have concussions in Japan? Anyway, SANADA casually brought the ref back in the ring and when he went to cover… Tanahashi snapped him up in a small package and got the pinfall! Tanahashi had to be helped to the back after the match.

Yuya Uemura (5-3, 10 pts) vs. Ryohei Oiwa (4-4, 8 pts) (17:54)  

Uemura controlled Oiwa early with a top wristlock. Oiwa went for an abdominal stretch, but Uemura countered into one of his own, then went back to the wristlock. Oiwa escaped and hit a dropkick, then went to a side headlock. Uemura escaped briefly, but Oiwa went back to the hold. Uemura tried to escape with a back suplex, but Owia held onto the side headlock to maintain control. 

Uemura finally backed Oiwa into a corner and escaped with shoulder blocks and chops. Uemura whipped Oiwa across the ring, and when Uemura charged him in the corner, Oiwa escaped and went back to the side headlock! Owia then transitioned from that into a cravat. Uemura escaped that with an armdrag, but Oiwa then caught him with a head scissors. Uemura broke that hold by making the ropes. Uemura was finally able to create some space and knock Oiwa down with a cross bodyblock. 

Uemura picked up the pace with arm drags and a dropkick. Uemura hit a bulldog for a near fall. Uemura went back to Oiwa’s wrist with a short-arm scissors. Oiwa escaped but Uemura then went into a hammerlock. Oiwa leveraged himself out of that and sent Uemura into the turbuckles. Oiwa caught Uemura with a back elbow and a lariat, then hit a doctor bomb for a near fall. 

Oiwa came off the top with a falling splash for a near fall as we approached the 15 minute mark. Oiwa went to a chinlock, but Uemura escaped with a backdrop suplex. Uemura hit a dropkick and an enziguri. Oiwa rolled through into a German suplex with a bridge for a near fall. 

Oiwa went for a discus lariat, but Uemura went with Oiwa’s momentum into a cross-arm breaker. Oiwa tired to turn that into a pin attempt, but Uemura escaped. Oiwa countered that into a sleeper. Uemura escaped and went for a rana, but Oiwa countered with a powerbomb into a jackknife cover for a near fall. Oiwa hit a lariat, then went for a discus lariat. But, Uemura turned that into a deadbolt suplex with a bridge and got the pinfall. 

This was tremendous! Go out of your way to see this one.

David Finlay (4-3, 8 pts) (w/ Gedo) defeated Yota Tsuji (4-3, 8pts) (15:20)

Going into the main event, Charlton said on commentary that if Finlay wins, “most of the block stays alive” but if Tsuji wins, “then we’re down to 4.” For sure though, if Finlay loses, he’s out of contention for the playoffs. So the result never really felt in doubt. 

Tsuji left himself open for a shot from Finlay by giving him a clean break. Tsuji sent Finlay to the floor after a spinning backbreaker. Finlay caught Tsuji going for a dive through the ropes with a forearm to take control. 

Back in the ring, Finlay took control with a camel clutch. Tsuji countered a clothesline with a reverse STO. Tsuji sent Finlay to the floor with a sliding dropkick, then hit Finlay with a tope suicidia.

Back in the ring, Tsuji hit a splash in the corner. He tried to come out of the corner with a suplex, but Finlay reversed it and suplexed Tsuji into the turnbuckle. Finlay slowed the pace down with forearms. Tsuji escaped a dominator. Tsuji got a near fall after a suplex into a sitout powerbomb. 

Finlay and Tsuji exchanged forearms in the middle of the ring. Finlay caught Tsuji with a lariat for a near fall. Tsuji escaped a powerbomb with a rana, then hit a superkick and a spear for a near fall. 

Tsuji jumped off the top rope into a powerbomb from Finlay. Finlay hit another powerbomb for a near fall. Finlay went for Overkill, but Tsuji escaped that with a powerbomb. Tsuji hit a bucklebomb. He went for a bucklebomb, but Finlay countered into his own bucklebomb. Tsuji went for a spear, but Finlay countered into a small package for two. Finlay went for Oblivion, but Tsuji countered that into a small package for two. Finlay finally hit the Oblivion for a near fall. 

Finlay sprung off the top rope with a stomp to the back of Tsuji’s head. He went for Overkill again, but Tsuji escaped. Tsuji charged in for a spear, but instead charged into a knee from Finlay. Finlay finally hit the Overkill to get the pinfall. Started out slow but got really good by the end.

After the match, Finlay told the crowd they were witnessing the greatest combat in G1 History. Gedo took the mic and told the fans Finlay was going beat everyone in his path and that New Japan needs a rebel.

A Block Standings:

10 points: EVIL, Uemura. 
8 points: Boltin Oleg, Callum Newman, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Ryohei Oiwa, David Finlay, Yota Tsujo  
6 points: Taichi, SANADA

Newman/Taichi and the last two matches were really good. There’s a very crowded field of potential candidates to make playoffs in the A Block.

Big Vinny V: TNA Impact review & NJPW G1 highlights

The Big Vinny V Show returns with your host, Vince Verhei.

Last Thursday, TNA Impact continued its recent trend of focusing more on promotion and less on matches, although it did have an entertaining main event: Moose & Eddie Edwards against Trick Williams & AJ Francis with a new challenger emerging to face Williams for the TNA World title at Emergence.

Elsewhere, Leon Slater made the first defense of his X-Division title which should have been a much bigger deal than it turned out to be; Indi Hartwell & Dani Luna facing Jodi Threat & Arianna Grace in a match that made absolutely no sense going in and even less sense when it was over; The Nemeth Brothers facing the Rascalz in a disappointingly short match; and NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jayne defending the TNA Knockouts title against former champion Masha Slamovich in another disappointingly short match.

Oh, and there were long promo segments featuring the Home Town Man, Mike Santana, and Sami Callihan.

Then, we head off to Osaka for two big recent matches in New Japan’s G1 Climax: Shingo Takagi vs. Shota Umino, and Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Konosuke Takeshita.

All this and more on a new Big Vinny V Show!

Click Here to Listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube

NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Shingo Takagi vs. Zack Sabre Jr.

Osaka hosts today’s NJPW G1 Climax 35 event featuring four B Block matches.

IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Zack Sabre Jr. faces Shingo Takagi in today’s main event. Sabre is part of of a seven-way-tie for first in B Block with his 8 points, while Shingo stands alone in eighth place in the Block with 6 points. Shingo must win to have any hope of advancing to the B Block playoffs. Sabre holds a 4-3 edge in their seven previous singles matches.

In the semi-main, Drilla Moloney faces El Phantasmo. Moloney is part of the logjam at the top of B Block with 8 points, while ELP is one of two wrestlers (Gabe Kidd, out injured) mathematically eliminated from playoff contention.

Great-O-Khan takes on Ren Narita in a matchup of two wrestlers with 8 points each in today’s second tournament bout.

YOSHI-HASHI (8 points) vs. Konosuke Takeshita (8 points) kicks off today’s tournament action.

A series of tag previews for Thursday’s A Block show fills out today’s undercard.

Today’s show streams live on NJPW World beginning at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time.

**********

Live from Osaka, INTEX Osaka Hall 5. 

Walker Stewart & Rocky Romero were on English commentary. 

Jakob Austin Young & Callum Newman defeated Taichi & Masatora Yasuda (11:45)

Newman and Taichi had a striking battle that Taichi ended with a nice lariat. The young lions squared off, and Yasuda caught Young with a dropkick. Yasuda went for a submission with a Boston crab. While Taichi and Newman brawled on the floor, Young came back with a twisting vertical suplex, and then finished off Yasuda with Jakob’s Ladder (a Sliced Bread #2) to get the pinfall. Newman taunted Taichi after his victory. 

Toru Yano & Boltin Oleg defeated Dick Togo & EVIL (w/ Don Fale)

EVIL invited Oleg to join the House of Torture by giving him a t-shirt. Oleg put on the House of Torture t-shirt, then dropkicked his oppoents anyway to start the match. Fale squashed Oleg against the ring barricades on the floor. EVIL choked out Oleg with a tag rope. Yano got the tag and the ref got bumped. With the ref down, Fale came in and the House of Torture team triple-teamed Yano. Oleg broke the triple team up and clotheslined Fale to the floor. Oleg caught Togo with an overhead belly-to-belly suplex. Yano hit Togo with a low blow and rolled him up for the pinfall. 

Yoshinobu Kanemaru & SANADA defeated Kaysuta Murashima & Hiroshi Tanahashi (6:25)

SANADA left Tanahashi laying after they brawled into the crowd. Tanahashi made it back to the ring before behing counted out. SANADA missed a moonsault and Tanahashi caught him with a slingblade. Tags were made on both sides. Murashima overpowered Kanemaru with a suplex and a powerslam for a nearfall. Kanemaru went after Murashima’s injured knee with kicks and a single leg crab. Kanemaru switched to a figure-four leglock. SANADA held back Tanahashi from making the save, and Murashima tapped out. 

Hartley Jackson & Ryohei Oiwa defeated Shoma Kato & Yuya Uemura (5:59) 

The opening sequence between Uemura and Oiwa was tremendous. Jackson blocked a double suplex from his opponents. They softened him up with a double dropkick and were able to get the double suplex on a second try. Jackson squashed Kato with a senton for a near fall. Oiwa hit Uemura with a nasty lariat. Kato tried a couple of roll-ups on Jackson but couldn’t hold him down. Jackson floored Kato with a lariat, then hit a death valley driver for the pinfall.

Gedo & David Finlay defeated Daiki Nagai & Yota Tsuji (6:32) 

The young lion Nagai tried to step up to Finlay and it did not go well. Nagai fared much better against Gedo. Finlay and Tsuji had a brief exchange. Nagai hit Finlay with a great dropkick. Finlay blocked a monkey flip, but Nagai caught Finlay with a crossbody for a near fall. Finlay blocked a small package attempt and turned it into Oblivion and got the pinfall. 

Konosuke Takeshita (5-2, 10 pts) defeated YOSHI-HASHI (4-3, 8 pts) in a G1 Climax 35 B Block Match. 

Takeshita worked over YOSHI-HASHI’s back early. YOSHI-HASHI caught Takeshita with a dropkick to the knee. YOSHI-HASHI hung Takeshita up in the ropes and hit a dropkick for a near fall. Takeshita hit a boot and dropped his opponent with a backbreaker. YOSHI-HASHI escaped a suplex with a hangman’s neckbreaker. Takeshita and YOSHI-HASHI exchanged strikes. Takeshita got a near fall with his inverted tombstone. YOSHI-HASHI countered a suplex attempt with a vicious swinging DDT. 

YOSHI-HASHI hit an avalanche clothesline in the corner. He went to the top but was way too slow getting there, and Takeshita caught up with him. YOSHI-HASHI hit a sunset powerbomb out of the corner and got a nearfall with a jackknife cover. Takeshita came back with a pair of exploders for two. YOSHI-HASHI blocked a knee strike and caught Takeshita with an inverted driver for another near fall. The crowd really started to get behind YOSHI-HASHI, and he floored Takeshita with a lariat. YOSHI-HASHI hit a swanton bomb for another near fall. Takeshita came back with a knee strike for a near fall. Takeshita then hit the Raging Fire for the pinfall. Takeshita is the first to 10 points in the tournament with this victory.

Ren Narita (5-2, 10 pts) defeated Great-O-Khan (4-4, 8 pts) vs.  in a G1 Climax 35 B Block Match (12:38)

Narita attacked O-Khan on the floor before the bell could ring. Nariata took him into the crowd and went after his knee. Narita grabbed the bell hammer while the referee tended to O-Khan. Narita hit O-Khan with the hammer. O-Khan finally got into the ring and Narita went to work on his leg. O-Khan hit overhead chops, but Narita went to the leg again to take control. 

Narita kept working over the knee. O-Khan caught Narita with a shoulder throw and immediately crumpled into a pile on the mat. O-Khan managed a fireman’s carry and an overhead belly to belly suplex. O-Khan went to a head and arm choke. All of sudden, Yoshinobu Kanemaru rang the ring bell, but there was no submission. O-Khan thought he won, and while the ref checked on Narita, Kanemaru snuck in from behind and hit O-Khan in the knee with his whiskey bottle. 

O-Khan went for a claw slam, but Narita countered into a knee bar. While Kanemaru distracted the ref again, Narita hit O-Khan in the knee with a push-up bar and locked in another knee bar. The bell rang, but O-Khan hadn’t submitted. This time it was Jakob Austin Young ringing the bell. This distraction allowed Khan to take control. O-Khan took out Narita and the ref with a claw slam. Kanemaru tried to interfere again, but Young cut him off. O-Khan and Narita went to the top where Narita spat whiskey in his face. Narita hit a low blow, then locked in one more kneebar to get the submission. What an overbooked mess. 

El Phantasmo (3-5, 6 pts) defeated Drilla Moloney (4-3, 8 pts) in a G1 Climax 35 B Block Match (5:14)

Phantasmo was playing spoiler here. Phantasmo came out quickly with a running dive and a moonsault to the floor. He tried for a springboard senton, but Moloney got his knees up and hit a gore for a near fall. Moloney folded Phantasmo up with a powerbomb for a near fall. Moloney went to the top, but Phantasmo cut him off. Moloney went for the gore again, but Phantasmo blocked it. Moloney went for a dominator, but Phantasmo countered by landing on his feet. Moloney hit ELP with a piledriver. Phantasmo caught Moloney with a Canadian Destroyer and the CR2 for a near fall. ELP hit a second CR2 and then a piedriver. Phantasmo hit the Thunderkiss 86 Splash and got the pinfall. I’m not sure why this only got half the time of the House of Torture mess.

IWGP World Champion Zack Sabre, Jr. (5-2, 10 pts) defeated Shingo Takagi (3-4, 6 pts) vs. in a G1 Climax 35 B Block Match (20:48)

This was a tremendous main event. Takagi was eliminated from winning the tournament with a loss. 

Lots of great mat work to start with neither man gaining an advantage. Takagi caught Sabre with a knee in the midsection. Sabre went to work on Takagi’s leg. Takagi went for a scorpion deathlock, but Sabre countered with a kneebar as Takagi stepped through. Sabre ground his heel into Takagi’s knee. 

Sabre went for a spinning toehold. Takagi kicked him away and caught Sabre with a DDT. Takagi hit an avalanche clothesline, suplex, and a senton for a near fall. Takagi got the crowd to rally behind him. He tried for Made in Japan, but Sabre blocked it. Takagi went for the sliding lariat, but Sabre countered it and snapped Takagi’s arm. 

Sabre went after Takagi’s arm. Takagi tried to counter with a coke, but Sabre countered. Sabre locked in a modified octopus, then transitioned into a knee bar. Takagi got to the ropes to break. Sabre went for a Zach Driver, but Takagi countered with a twisting suplex. Takagi hit a superplex but was too hurt to make a cover. Takagi hit Made in Japan for a near fall. Takagi tried for Last of the Dragon, but Sabre blocked it. Sabre hit a Zach Driver but the impact had both men down at the fifteen minute mark. 

Sabre and Takagi started to exchange headbutts, but Sabre put an end to that with a running kick. Sabre hit a series of kicks, then went back to the arm. Takagi hit a Zach Driver of his own, and then a Burning Dragon for a near fall. Takagi drove in some elbows. Sabre went for a sleeper. Takagi fell back to break the hold, but Sabre locked it right back in. Takagi went for a cradle to escape, but Sabre countered with his own cradle. Sabre hit a DDT out of the corner and a Zach Driver for a near fall. Takagi kicked out, but Sabre went right into a knee bar. Takagi struggled to get out to the ropes, and just when it looked like he’d have to tap out, he rolled himself into the ropes to break. 

Sabre hit three lariats on Takagi, who wouldn’t go down. Takagi hit a pumping bomber and Sabre went down. Takagi hit a sliding forearm and another lariat. Takagi hit the Last of the Dragon, but Sabre turned into Takagi’s pin attempt with a cradle of his own and got the pinfall, ending Takagi’s chances in this year’s G1.

So as the night ends in B Block, Konosuke Takeshita, Ren Narita and Zach Sabre Jr. in a three way tie in at the top with 10 points. Drilla Moloney, Great-O-Khan, YOSHI-HASHI and Shota Umino have 8 points. Shingo Takagi and El Phantasmo only have 6 points and are eliminated.






NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yota Tsuji

NJPW’s G1 Climax 35 tournament continues today with an A Block show from Fukuoka.

Hiroshi Tanahashi faces Yota Tsuji in the main event tournament match. Tanahashi is part of a three-way-tie for last place in A Block, while Tsuji is part of a three-way-tie for first place. Tanahashi has 4 points, while Tsuji stands at 8.

The next G1 tournament win for Tanahashi will give him 100 for his unparalleled career.

David Finlay and his 4 points face EVIL and his 8 points in today’s semi-main event.

Yuya Uemura with 8 points and coming off a victory over Tanahashi, faces SANADA and his 4 points.

Taichi faces Ryohei Oiwa in a battle of 6 points on the show.

The other competitors with 6 points also square off with Boltin Oleg vs. Callum Newman.

A series of tag matches previewing the next B Block show on Tuesday round out today’s undercard. The show begins at 4 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World.

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Main Card – Tag Team Matches

The Don Callis Family (Konosuke Takeshita & Rocky Romero) defeated Shoma Kato & YOSHI-HASHI

(YOSHI-HASHI, given his G1 record this year, doesn’t inspire hope in me to win this to enter the semi-finals, let alone the finals. The B-Block matches on August 5 may change that, but I look to Takeshita to maintain his dominance.)

Takeshita tossed YOSHI-HASHI around at ringside, while the nimble Romero used aerial kicks keep Kato down. Kato ran the ropes at Takeshita’s request, eventually knocking the Alpha down. YOSHI-HASHI kept up the momentum, but Takeshita’s shoulder drove him away. Romero pinned Kato after a Sliced Bread.

House Of Torture (Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru) defeated United Empire (Great-O-Khan & Jakob Austin Young)

(Whether to instill further doubts in Khan or to sow seeds of an epic babyface comeback, Khan’s knee and arm injuries add drama to his G1 journey. Plus, it’s a smart plan by House of Torture—wear down your opponent so they’ll be easy to handle the next night. Khan sold his wounds well.)

Sensing the still-present damage to Khan’s arm courtesy of Zack Sabre Jr the previous night, Narita targeted his right arm. Kanemaru, meanwhile, later focused on Khan’s left knee. Young left Narita dazed after he gained control and floated into a Tornado-DDT. Kanemaru yanked the referee down while he applied utmost pressure to Young in a figure-four leglock. Narita kept Khan at bay while Young tapped out to the leglock.

Post-match: Kanemaru and Narita brought in a steel chair to add further punishment to Khan’s knee.

Bullet Club War Dogs (Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori) defeated El Phantasmo & Jado

(It’s hard to say who will walk away with additional points tomorrow. Moloney’s on a hot streak right now, but Phantasmo in 2025 has a certain flair about him.)

Ishimori suffered at the hands of Jado and Phantasmo, with the former landing a DDT. Moloney feigned a ripcord to subvert Phantasmo into a series of chops. Phantasmo aimed for a CR2 but rolled away to Jado after a Spinebuster. Ishimori played dead after Jado’s clothesline, only to pull him in for a roll-up for the win.

TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Zack Sabre Jr.) defeated Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi

(Nagai came into his own in this match. Takagi’s support went a long way, too. With whatever happens with the remnants of Los Ingobernables de Japon, I hope Nagai finds his place with them.)

Sabre and Takagi wrestled to a standstill. Nagai had no such luck against Jackson. Sabre popped in for his own technical pressure on the Young Lion. Jackson returned for a senton, but Takagi saved Nagai. Together, they neutralized Jackson. Nagai even narrowly toppled Jackson with a Canadian Destroyer!

Sabre came to Jackson’s aid, but Nagai snatched him for a Spinebuster. Jackson’s girth prevented a powerslam by Nagai, and he responded with a senton. He then followed up with a Jagged Edge to Nagai.

G1 Climax A-Block Matches

Oleg Boltin (7) defeated Callum Newman (6)

(Boltin is his own beast, but Newman pulled out a hard-fought effort. Despite the back issues, he made Boltin fight for the win.)

Boltin rolled to the outside after a hurricanrana by Newman. Outside, he withstood the unforgiving blue steel barricades. Chops and slams by Boltin aggravated Newman’s injured back. Newman transitioned Boltin’s Kamikaze to a semi-successful hurricanrana. Boltin landed a standing Kamikaze.

Newman pressed into Boltin’s midsection with a stomp from the top rope. He rolled through Boltin’s suplex. With swiftness, Boltin caught Newman, who had full momentum, and planted him with a Kamikaze for the win.

Ryohei Oiwa (7) defeated Taichi (6)

(Taichi is 6-6 in his G1 win-loss record, so he can’t get too comfortable. While I support him, I’m also investing in Oiwa stock.)

Equally strong, Taichi and Oiwa repeatedly reached an impasse. Taichi broke this with a kick. Oiwa gained the upper hand, pummelling Taichi with a scoop slam and a senton. An enzuigiri handed Taichi a comeback. Oiwa escaped a Black Mephisto to drop Taichi with a Doctor Bomb. Dangerous Backdrop provided Taichi with a moment to breathe.

A weary war of stiff forearms wore weaker, but Taichi’s wrist control kept him in control. An Axe Bomber cemented it. Taichi cut off any offense Oiwa might have wanted with enzuigiris each time. However, in the nick of time, Oiwa sent Taichi falling with The Grip. This earned Oiwa the pinfall.

SANADA (6) defeated Yuya Uemura (8)

(Perhaps the only match I wasn’t fond of. Were it not for the House of Torture, this bout would’ve had the makings of a great match.)

Within minutes, SANADA had wrist control, but it shifted to Uemura. SANADA regained it, but a deep armdrag swung it back in Uemura’s favor. SANADA opted to other forms of offense, but Uemura would return wrist control in his favor with more arm drags. Shining Wizard by SANADA broke the cycle. Choosing something new, Uemura plunged SANADA with a back suplex.

Uemura tried for an armbar. SANADA propelled Uemura into Referee Marty Asami, leading him to proceed with a low blow. Uemura rolled out of the way of SANADA’s guitar shot. After Asami missed a capture pin, Yoshinobu Kanemaru slid into the ring to spray whiskey in Uemura’s face.

SANADA finally blasted Uemura with his guitar; Kanemaru took advantage of this by rolling Asami back over and directing his attention to SANADA’s pin. This lent SANADA the pinfall.

David Finlay (6) defeated EVIL (8)

(Surprisingly great. This naturally warranted a lack of referee during the more plunder-heavy moments of this match. Moreover, the odds stacked against Finlay gave the Bullet Club leader the support of fans needed to propel him to victory. Throughout his G1 journey, at this juncture, Finlay needed this win.)

Finlay cut EVIL’s entrance short as he drove him into the crowd. EVIL tubmled onto the floor as Finlay landed upright, clotheslining him to the outside. Don Fale and Dick Togo joined EVIL in tossing Finlay into the barricade, even knocking over a commentary desk. Both opponents traded profanities on the microphone as EVIL choked Finlay with the wire.

Referee Red Shoes prevented EVIL from using a steel chair, leading to the House of Torture leader to toss it to Gedo. This lent Fale and Togo to aid EVIL by removing the turnbuckle pad. Landing in the exposed iron of the padless corner, Finlay fired back with an Irish Curse. Fale attempted to squish Finlay in the corner but instead landed Red Shoes. He, EVIL, and Togo struck Finlay with a steel chair as a Young Lion carried Red Shoes to the back.

EVIL and his henchmen were singlehandedly thwarted by Finlay, with Fale shockingly sent back in a vertical suplex. Fueled by adrenaline, Finlay nearly spelt doom for EVIL with a powerbomb, stopped only by a low blow. EVIL grabbed a steel chain to choke Finlay and adorned his lariat with its unforgiving metal. Spear by Finlay downed EVIL. Gedo handed Finlay a shillelagh. Kenta Sato replaced Red Shoes as referee. Finlay defeated EVIL with an Overkill.

Main Event G1 Climax A-Block

Hiroshi Tanahashi (6) defeated Yota Tsuji (8)

(Hope for The Ace is on the horizon. Tanahashi gaining his 100th G1 win bolsters the heightened stakes of the tournament. Can he keep up this momentum? He’s made career history, but will he end his career on the highest note possible? This is what the G1 is about, beckoning fans to speculate where things will go from here.

As far as the match goes, Tanahashi had his undying charisma driving the match, fully weaving his age and weakening knees into the storyline and the match structure. Tsuji was no slouch either, making Tanahashi look like a billion yen. To fill his Gene Blasters with so much dread that they’re hardly seen, he had the potential of a threat, supplanted by the legend.)

Tanahashi clenched hold of Tsuji’s wrists, broken by a rope break. Tsuji worked Tanahashi’s knees, most painfully exemplified by a horizontal Dragon Screw Legwhip. Karma found Tsuji, as Tanahashi sprang his own Dragon Screw Legwhip. Scoop slam reintroduced Tsuji to the mat, followed by a top rope senton. Tsuji countered a Slingblade with a backslide and a knee to the Ace’s face.

Tsuji aimed to send Tanahashi reeling with a vertical suplex but fell to the mat after a Twist’n’Shout. Tanahashi ended a standoff by stopping Tsuji’s Gene Blaster with a Slingblade. The Ace countered another Gene Blaster into a Snapdragon Suplex. Despite his best efforts, Tsuji bore the brunt of three High Fly Flows and lost the match.

(All but one of the G1 matches hit on all cylinders. Whether it’s the youthful clash of Oleg Boltin and Callum Newman, the continuance of the War Dogs versus House of Torture between David Finlay and EVIL, Taichi falling behind Ryohei Oiwa, or Tanahashi gaining his 100th G1 win, there was much to enjoy. Sadly, the House of Torture had to get a win, with SANADA taking out Yuya Uemura, with interference. But that pales in comparison to the hype of the tournament as it heats up.)

NJPW G1 Climax 35 results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yuya Uemura

NJPW’s G1 Climax 35 tournament continues today in Kagawa with A Block action.

In the main event, Hiroshi Tanahashi looks for his 100th career G1 match victory against Yuya Uemura. Tana enters the bout with just 4 points in the tournament, while Uemura has 6 points in a crowded four-way tie for second place in the Block. Tanahashi has won both prior career singles matches against Uemura.

In the semi-main, A Block leader Yota Tsuji and his 8 points face Taichi, who stands at 4 points.

Boltin Oleg and his 6 points will face last place David Finlay and his 2 points in the third tournament bout of the night.

EVIL and Ryohei Oiwa match up in another A Block battle, with both currently sitting at 6 points.

SANADA vs. Callum Newman in a matchup of two competitors with 4 points each kicks off the evening’s tournament bouts.

A series of tag team matches previewing the next B Block show fill out today’s undercard.

**********

Main Card – Tag Team Matches

Katsuya Murashima & Shota Umino defeated Shoma Kato & YOSHI-HASHI

(Loved the conviction from Kato in this match and how well Umino sold it.)

Kato and YOSHI-HASHI exhausted Murashima for an early advantage, keeping him isolated from his partner. Umino gained control with a Headhunter, but YOSHI-HASHI regained momentum with a lariat. A confident Kato landed a suplex and hoped for another, but ate a lariat courtesty of Umino, leading to a quick pinfall.

BULLET CLUB War Dogs (Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori) defeated The Don Callis Family (Konosuke Takeshita & Rocky Romero)

(I feel this was meant to up the hype for Takeshita versus Moloney in the upcoming Block B matches this weekend, but there didn’t seem to be much of that to really sink my teeth into. There could’ve been more of them, for sure. Perhaps they’re just saving what they can do. Also, kudos to them for managing to brawl in the dark with minimal lighting—I imagine fighting in one of those Hollister stores would’ve been like that.)

Moloney and Takeshita sought to collide with one another, but both were pulled out by their respective tag partners. The Alpha and Romero cut Ishimori away from Moloney’s side of the ring, working the Bone Soldier’s arm. Ishimori saved himself with a shoulderbreaker to Romero. Takeshita and Moloney each teased their finishers, ultimately Moloney succeeded with a Brainbuster. Moloney and Takeshita brawled on the outside, tumbling into the blue steel of the guardrail. La Mistica tapped Romero out courtesy of Ishimori.

Post-match: Moloney and Takeshita continued battling each other in the darkness of the crowd.

El Phantasmo & Jado defeated Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi

(The humor alone in this callback to 2022 adds the right amount of silliness for ELP and Takagi’s Block A match on August 2nd. Poor Nagai.)

Harkening back to KOPW 2022’s “Who’s Your Daddy?” Match, Phantasmo let Takagi know he was the daddy now. Perplexed in this new development of fatherhood status, Takagi had little time to process as Nagai broke up the proceedings.

Jado and Phantasmo punished Nagai in the corner. Spinebuster by Nagai gave him an edge against Phantasmo. Takagi sought to interrupt, but Jado grounded him several inches away as Phantasmo bullied Nagai. An Unidentified Flying Opponent dropped Nagai on his back, and Phantasmo gained the pinfall.

TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Zack Sabre Jr.) defeated United Empire (Great-O-Khan & Jakob Austin Young)

(The contrast in styles between always leaves me salivating for more with the sporadic ZSJ and Khan matches we do get. Their match is going to rock.)

Khan overwhelmed Sabre with his might, even seeking a pin early. Eventually, he grabbed Sabre with a Claw, which was reversed into a sleeper. Jackson was too much for Young, who called upon Khan for additional firepower. Sabre and Khan traded Cobra Twists, leading Khan to flip the former over with a Gutwrench Tuck. Jackson pinned Young after a Jagged Edge.

G1 Climax A-Block Matches

Callum Newman defeated SANADA

(Newman’s excelling in this year’s G1. Though he still evokes Ospreay with the Oscutter, he’s starting to find his own path in his own structure and formula in these matches.)

Newman wasted no time, flying over the top rope to lay out SANADA. The Kagawa crowd dispersed as SANADA tossed Newman around in the crowd (and also into Milano Collection, who also got thrown into the fans). Newman swung a comeback thanks to a dropkick, grasping dominion of hte match whilst evading SANADA’s high volume offense.

Thinking he’d capitalize with an Oscutter 2.0, Newman accidentally planted the referee, casually pushed into harm’s way by SANADA. Newman thwarted SANADA’s Skull End with a roll-up, but no one could count the pin. Dropping SANADA with a beheading lariat and dragging the referee to action, Newman’s dreams were crashed by a 2-count.

The pair evaded each other’s finishers, but Newman rendered SANADA incapacitated with a kick, knee, and vertical suplex for the pinfall.

EVIL defeated Ryohei Oiwa

(Loved the match, hated the finish. Well, halfway. The match built into something incredible, lending itself to the trend of House of Torture comeuppances as of late. Doing something new breaks the monotony, no matter how cathartic.)

Ready for EVIL’s underhanded tactics, Oiwa prepared his best strengths, his power to prevent as much of his shenanigans as possible. Soon, EVIL gained sway over the match by slamming Oiwa into the barricade and distracting Referee Marty Asami. Don Fale and Dick Togo could provide additional torture on the outside. Oiwa downed EVIL with a DDT and an Elbow Drop.

Togo screeched Oiwa’s trajectory to a halt with a chairshot, followed by a bodyslam from Fale. EVIL tried a Darkness Falls, but Oiwa kicked out at 1 and swung EVIL into an exposed turnbuckle. Singlehandedly trouncing Togo and Fale’s interference, Oiwa finally had assistance from Hartley Jackson who dragged Fale away. Battering EVIL in the exposed turnbuckle, he reached for a German Suplex into a Chaos Theory; Asami evidently tired of being struck, steered clear. EVIL pied Oiwa in the face with powder and tapped him out with a Darkness Scorpion hold.

David Finlay defeated Oleg Boltin

(I’m a big Boltin fan. That said, Finlay needed this win, and the elation on his face sold how much he needed this save, giving him some much needed points.)

The pair circled each other, with Boltin’s strength and resilience keeping Finlay on his toes. Soon, Finlay found an opening in the foreign waters of ringside, where he sent Boltin into the crowd. Boltin charged into Finlay, spiraling both out of the ring. He struck Finlay’s chest and suplexed him, dizzying him with a Boltin Shake.

Finlay snuck in a Northern Irish Curse and Oblivion to take jurisdiction of the match away from Boltin. The Kazakh wrestler clutched a comeback with a Kamikaze. He unleashed one more on Finlay, but a subsequent one transitioned into Finlay’s capture pin, costing Boltin the match

Taichi defeated Yota Tsuji

(Both men needed this win. Tsuji, score-wise. Taichi, character-wise. Overlooked for the last time, he demands to be taken seriously, having had to earn his way to the G1 tournament to begin with. Great match, with the appropriate drama.)

Tsuji landed a tope suicida to bring this match to his favor early on. Taichi fired back, with a devastating Axe Bomber Lariat giving him some breathing room. Despite this valiant comeback, Tsuji kicked him back onto the mat with a resounding clap. Steadied for a Gene Blaster, Taichi instead transitioned into a Black Mephisto, which itself reversed into a running powerbomb. Another lariat by Tsuji, this time countered into a Gedo Clutch.

Once more going for a Gene Blaster, Tsuji fell instead to a Dangerous Backdrop. In a snap, Tsuji ended Taichi’s wrist control with a quick, short-range Gene Blaster. Taichi respondded with a Dangerous Backdrop and a Black Mephisto to put Tsuji away in front of a raucous Kagawa audience.

Main Event G1 Climax A-Block

Yuya Uemura defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi

(Uemura just accrued an impressive accolade, important to his young career—taking down Tanahashi in the G1. He gave it his all, too. The selling of his knee stayed nearly consistent. Giving hope to fans of the Ace, just to prove that he was better on this night. Uemura’s path in the G1 Climax puts him closer to higher legacy.)

Uemura struggled against Tanahashi in the beginning lock-ups, having his leg propped up and knee targeted by the Ace. Despite this agony, Uemura managed two dropkicks. Again ensnared by Tanahashi’s knee focus, Uemura was left writhing, suffering a prone Dragon Screw Legwhip. A Texas Cloverleaf rubbed further salt into the wound.

Turning this match around, Uemura matched the Ace’s energy by centering on his arm. Risking his knee health, Uemura attempted a Deadbolt Suplex pin, but it gave out, much to his frustration. Reverse Slingblade and a regular Slingblade gave way to two High Fly Flows, one of which missed. A prolonged forearm exchange led to Tanahashi once more attacking Uemura’s knee. Enzuigiri by Uemura dazed the Ace, leading to a Deadbolt Suplex pinfall.

(Taichi and Yota Tsuji was the most emotionally compelling story to come of this, but Uemura’s victory over Tanahashi is worth noting. Callum Newman’s triumph over SANADA also made for a gripping watch. No barn-burners, but a fun show nonetheless.)

NJPW G1 Climax 35 live results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Ryohei Oiwa

NJPW G1 Climax 35 continues today in Nagoya with a show featuring five A Block matches.

In the main event, company president Hiroshi Tanahashi faces the up and coming Ryohei Oiwa in a matchup of two wrestlers with 4 points each in the tournament. It will be the first career singles meeting between the two.

In the semi-main, EVIL and Yuya Uemura go head-to-head in another first-ever singles matchup between them. EVIL is tied for the A Block lead with 6 points, while Uemura has 4 points.

SANADA and Taichi will square off in another A Block battle. SANADA has 2 points, while Taichi has 4. These two have met seven times in singles matches in their careers, with SANADA holding a 6-1 edge.

David Finlay and Callum Newman go one-on-one in the show’s second tournament bout in yet another first-time meeting. Both enter the bout with 2 points each.

In the first tournament match of the night, Yota Tsuji faces Boltin Oleg, with the winner in position to take the A Block lead with a victory. Both are tied with EVIL with 6 points atop A Block to this point.

A series of tag team matches previewing the next B Block matches fills out today’s undercard. The show begins at 4 a.m. Eastern time on NJPW World.

**********

Tag matches

El Phantasmo & Jado defeated United Empire (Great-O-Khan & Jakob Austin Young)

(Phantasmo was in great form for an opener. His banter with Young was hilarious.)

Khan seemed to have early control after the bell when he grappled with Phantasmo. Jado had the misfortune of Khan applying the pressure of his weight seated on the top rope turnbuckle. Jado clenched a comeback after a lariat, to which Phantasmo followed up on with a plancha to Khan and Young. Back in the ring, Phantasmo landed a Canadian Revolution 2 on Young for the win.

Katsuya Murashima & Shota Umino defeated Daiki Nagai & Shingo Takagi

(Murashima has great potential. Hopefully soon, he’ll have a great stable to join. Umino was actually pretty fine here. Nagai is settling in well with Takagi, Hiromu Takahashi, and Yota Tsuji in the Los Ingobernables de Japon remnants.)

Nagai tagged in Takagi after quickly gaining an advantage over Murashima. Umino got the better of Takagi with a Fisherman Suplex, but ate a lariat for his troubles. Murashima briefly had control until Nagai unleashed a Spinebuster and a Boston Crab. Exchanging lariats, Takagi eventually overwhelmed Umino. Murashima tapped Nagai out with a Boston Crab.

BULLET CLUB War Dogs (Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori) defeated House Of Torture (Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru)

(Easily digestible. This knew what it had to be and didn’t overstay its welcome. Moloney and Ishimori were splendid.)

Narita and Kanemaru bore down on Ishimori, who escaped with a big boot to the former. A huge dropkick by Moloney to Narita kept him in solid control, later followed by a Spinebuster. Kanemaru avoided Ishimori’s offense by throwing the referee in his way and locked in a figure-four leglock. Ishimori reversed another figure-four leglock into a cradle and later a Gedo Clutch for the pinfall.

TMDK (Hartley Jackson & Zack Sabre Jr.) defeated The Don Callis Family (Konosuke Takeshita & Rocky Romero)

(Using TMDK to combine their efforts on Romero was a smart play. In that, they forced Takeshita to work more on a handicap basis, even when Romero was active. This also paid dividends in the end for Jackson to put Romero away. The prospect of Sabre and Takeshita leaves me salivating; they have every potential for a barn-burner.)

Jackson used his strength and Sabre utilized his submission maneuvering to promptly weaken Romero. Sabre continued bullying Romero, taunting Takeshita in the process. Takeshita flew in with a kick to Sabre, but couldn’t faze Jackson with one so he threw in a stiff forearm. Following a dense octopus hold, Sabre was rendered incapacitated with Takeshita’s lariat. Jackson smashed Romero with a Senton. Romero gave a valiant last stand, but ultimately fell to Jackson’s Jagged Edge as Sabre and Takeshita brawled against a barricade.

G1 Climax 2025 Block A Matches

Yota Tsuji defeated Oleg Boltin

(Holy heck. This started off tonight’s Block A matches right. Tsuji and Boltin left my blood flowing on this one.)

A Boltin Shake dizzied Tsuji in the early goings. Further overbearing on Tsuji, he wrenched in a Boston Crab. Boltin crashed over the barricade courtesy of Tsuji’s Tope Suicida. Boltin and Tsuji battled for leverage, with a Gene Blaster superseding a German suplex. A Kamikaze by Boltin caused considerable damage. Nagoya’s voice grew resonant as the pair battled on the top rope, but Tsuji grounded both men and won via a Gene Blaster.

Callum Newman defeated David Finlay

(Newman getting this win is definitely good for his NJPW resume, putting him in a good place. As El Phantasmo and Walker Stewart brilliantly illustrated on commentary, Finlay is desperate to get a win over Hiroshi Tanahashi like the other leaders of Bullet Club and despite his ruthlessness in this match, this thought haunted him the entire time. Good stuff.)

Newman wasted no time, dropkicking Finlay, raining down punches, and another dropkick—Finlay couldn’t even take off his jacket. From the ring, Finlay sent Newman flying to the outside. Irate, he tossed Newman through the chairs amid a dispersing Nagoya audience. Refusing to lose, Newman endured the many punishments of Finlay. A big boot lent Newman space to recover. A superkick + lariat combination seemed to have given a harder grip on the match, but an Oblivion wrought devastation on his opponent. Finlay sought a powerbomb, but Newman transitioned it into a sitout pin for the victory.

SANADA defeated Taichi

(I wasn’t a fan of this. Granted, Milano Collection A.T. and Masatora Yasuda were some pleasant surprises to this.)

Interrupting his own theme song, Taichi went to work on SANADA with no hesitation. Matching this energy, SANADA brought Taichi to the outside, leaving Nagoya to once more be inconvenienced out of their seats. Milano Collection A.T. on commentary came to Taichi’s aid, throwing SANADA into a chair. With some kicks, Taichi at last had some momentum, until Yoshinobu Kanemaru accosted him. SANADA reached for an underhanded tactic, but attempted a top rope move instead. This gave Taichi room for offense, ending with a backdrop.

SANADA grabbed Referee Marty Asami to trounce a Black Mephisto attempt. Taichi’s jackknife pin was close, but Kanemaru pulled Asami ahead of the 3-count. Low blow by SANADA, combined with a Shining Wizard would have given him an easy win, had it not been for an intervening Young Lion Masatora Yasuda. Taichi hesitated slamming SANADA’s guitar over his head, wasting enough time for Kanemaru to return with a Whiskey Mist. SANADA finally used the guitar on Taichi for the win.

Post-match: SANADA and Kanemaru looked as though they would assault Taichi more, before Yasuda met them in defense of Taichi. They gave him a beatdown and left.

Yuya Uemura defeated EVIL

(House of Torture matches are actually good when they get a comeuppance. Uemura being the hopeful, shining beacon for that despite the drama and the shenanigans made up for this being the stable’s second consecutive match.)

Uemura showed promise once the bell rang, but EVIL and Don Fale teamed up to torment him on the outside. EVIL worked Uemura’s back, yet that didn’t stop him from delivering a back suplex. Dick Togo distracted Uemura, giving EVIL ample opportunity to toss his opponent to the outside for a beatdown by Fale and Togo. Uemura caught EVIL with an armbar, to which Fale distracted the referee. Togo followed this with a chairshot to Uemura’s back.

Fed up with the distractions, Uemura dove onto Fale and took out Togo. EVIL fired back with Darkness Falls and a lariat. Deadbolt Suplex gave Uemura the 3-count pinfall.

Main event — G1 Climax Block A

Ryohei Oiwa defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi

(My enjoyment of Tanahashi’s retirement run stems from how sincere his desperation gets; he doesn’t need to do it with meandering promos or low blows. He does it all with in-ring storytelling. It’s endearing: he faces his matches in his twilight like a young man in the dawn of his career. Oiwa benefits from this immensely, as he’s one of the young stars that evokes what Tanahashi was in his prime.)

Tanahashi and Oiwa were evenly matched in their lock-ups, but Oiwa showed flashes of brilliance with a headlock takedown. Tanahashi grounded his opponent, working Oiwa’s legs. A dropkick supplanted the Ace, yet the harm done to Oiwa’s legs still remained evident. Oiwa withstood a big forearm and a Twist’n’Shout to toss the veteran from the top rope to the center of the ring. Tanahashi halted Oiwa’s upward trajectory with a German suplex. Oiwa swung a comeback, catching Tanahashi mid-air with a wristlock.

Oiwa stole the Ace’s High Fly Flow, succeeded with a Doctor Bomb. Clenching in a sleeper hold, Oiwa tossed a spinning lariat. Defying a cradle by Tanahashi, Oiwa pulled out another spinning lariat, this time putting Tanahashi down for good. With a pinfall, Oiwa progressed in the G1 Climax.

The tag matches tonight were fun, but not required viewing, save for TMDK versus the Don Callis Family. The Block A matches profited from Boltin and Tsuji’s war, Newman’s upset over Finlay, Uemura surviving the House of Torture, and Tanahashi’s stand against Oiwa. The structure, storytelling, and finish for Taichi versus SANADA left a sour taste in my mouth, sweetened only by Yasuda and Milano’s assistance.

July 28, 2025 Observer Newsletter: The life & times of Hulk Hogan

Image: WWE

Dave Meltzer returns with a new Wrestling Observer Newsletter, led off by his obituary on the late Hulk Hogan who passed away Thursday in Florida due to cardiac arrest.

Dave also looks at the NJPW G1 tournament, a quick-hit preview of next weekend’s WWE SummerSlam, the latest news in AEW, CMLL, AAA, TNA, and other promotions, plus more history.

Click here to read.

NJPW star withdraws from G1 Climax due to injury

One of NJPW’s top wrestlers has been forced to withdraw from the G1 Climax due to injury.

Gabe Kidd’s tournament run began on July 19 with a loss to Konosuke Takeshita on the opening night. Since then, Kidd has had to forfeit his scheduled B Block matches with a right knee injury preventing him from competing. It’s now been officially confirmed that Kidd is out of the remainder of the G1. He shared the news with fans during an appearance at Friday’s NJPW show in Tokyo.

“I was really hopeful that I could come back and power through this and continue in this G1 Climax, but I’ve spoke to the doctors and there is no way I can be cleared, so I have no other choice [but] to withdraw from the G1 Climax,” Kidd announced. “And this is sh*t, man. It really f*cking sucks. It’s been a mental battle these past few days since I found out this information.”

Further details about the injury and when Kidd will be able to return have not been provided. Kidd promised that, when he is able to come back, he will be the best version of himself fans have ever seen.

“A positive note is that I’ve received hundreds of messages from these people — the fans — and they’ve said they want me to rest and come back stronger,” he said. “And I can only promise you one thing, is that when I am back fighting on this blue mat that it is going to be the best version of Gabe Kidd that you’ve ever f*cking seen.”

NJPW also has not announced if Kidd will be vacating the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship. He won the title from Yota Tsuji in June and made his first defense against Hiroshi Tanahashi earlier this month.

WOL: Will John Cena turn babyface at SummerSlam?

It’s Saturday and that means Wrestling Observer Live time with Jim Valley.

He unveils a brand new feature asking your opinions on topics in the wrestling news:”DO YOU FUNK WITH THAT?” He will list a topic and you say whether or not you “FUNK” with it. “Yes, you FUNK with that” or “No, you don’t FUNK with that.”

Plus, Jim talks about AJ Styles’ role at TNA Slammiversary, a recap of night one of the NJPW G1 and a preview of night two, and SmackDown had a lot of newsworthy developments like new matches and stipulations for SummerSlam.

After the contract signing, will SummerSlam be the place for John Cena’s babyface turn?

Check it out.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

NJPW announces event schedule for G1 Climax 2025

Though the tournament is still a few months away, NJPW is rolling out its plans for the 2025 G1 Climax.

Consisting of 19 shows in total, the full schedule for G1 Climax 35 has now been announced. It begins in Hokkaido on the weekend of July 19-20 and will conclude with two nights at Ariake Arena in Tokyo on August 16-17. The full list of shows can be seen below:

  • Opening weekend: Saturday, July 19 and Sunday, July 20 (Hokkaido: Hokkai Kita Yell)
  • Night three: Tuesday, July 22 (Sendai: Sendai Sun Plaza Hall)
  • Night four: Wednesday, July 23 (Nagaoka: Ao-re Nagaoka)
  • Nights five and six: Friday, July 25 and Saturday, July 26 (Tokyo: Ota-ku Gymnasium)
  • Night seven: Sunday, July 27 (Nagoya: Port Messe Nagoya)
  • Night eight: Wednesday, July 30 (Osaka- Yamato Arena)
  • Night nine: Friday, August 1 (Kagawa: Sun Messe Kagawa)
  • Night 10: Saturday, August 2 (Hiroshima: Hiroshima Sun Plaza Hall)
  • Night 11: Sunday, August 3 (Fukuoka: Fukuoka International Convention Center)
  • Night 12: Tuesday, August 5 (Osaka: Intex Osaka)
  • Night 13: Thursday, August 7 (Tokyo: Korakuen Hall)
  • Night 14: Friday, August 8 (Yokohama: Yokohama Budokan)
  • Night 15: Sunday, August 10 (Gunma: G Messe Gunma)
  • Night 16: Wednesday, August 13 (Hamamatsu: Act City Hamamatsu)
  • Night 17: Thursday, August 14 (Tokyo: Korakuen Hall)
  • Final weekend: Saturday, August 16 and Sunday, August 17 (Tokyo: Ariake Arena)

NJPW English-language commentator Walker Stewart noted that he’ll be doing live commentary for every night of the tournament, which will air on NJPW World.

No participants for this year’s G1 have been confirmed yet. The tournament winner traditionally receives an IWGP World Championship shot at Wrestle Kingdom, but Zack Sabre Jr. chose to forego that tradition last year. After winning the G1, he opted to challenge for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship at King of Pro Wrestling 2024 instead of waiting until the Tokyo Dome.

Hirooki Goto is the current IWGP World Heavyweight Champion.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 17 live results: Playoffs begin

Two playoff matches on today’s NJPW G1 Climax 34 show will decide the semifinals set for Saturday, August 17.

In the main event, Yota Tsuji will face Konosuke Takeshita in a B Block battle. Takeshita won the previous singles meeting between the two earlier in this year’s tournament. The winner will advance to Saturday’s semifinals to face top B Block scorer David Finlay.

In the semi-main, Shingo Takagi takes on Great-O-Khan in a matchup of the second and third place finishers in A Block. The winner will face top A Block scorer Zack Sabre Jr. in the semifinals on Saturday. Shingo is 4-0 in his career against O-Khan, including a victory in this year’s tournament.

The undercard today:

  • Zack Sabre Jr. & Hartley Jackson vs. David Finlay & Gedo
  • Shota Umino, El Phantasmo & Jado vs. EVIL, Ren Narita & Dick Togo
  • Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI vs. HENARE & Callum Newman
  • Jeff Cobb & Francesco Akira vs. Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi, Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano vs. Yujiro Takahashi, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI, Tomoaki Honma & Katsuya Murashima vs. SANADA, Taichi, DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku

**********

Undercard Results

SANADA, Taichi, DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku defeated Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI, Tomoaki Honma & Katsuya Murashima

Taiji Ishimori challenged DOUKI for the IWGP Junior Championship

Hiroshi Tanahashi, Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano defeated Yujiro Takahashi, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee defeated Jeff Cobb & Francesco Akira

HENARE & Callum Newman defeated Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI

EVIL, Ren Narita & Dick Togo defeated Shota Umino, El Phantasmo & Jado

Zack Sabre Jr. & Hartley Jackson defeated David Finlay & Gedo

**********

Shingo Takagi defeated Great-O-Khan

Shingo was the first man to establish control by driving O-Khan into the corner and dropping him with a tackle. A suplex from O-Khan allowed him to take control from Shingo. O-Khan then used targeted holds and strikes to begin wearing down the arm of Shingo, perhaps to prevent the pumping bomber later in the match.

A DDT from Shingo opened the door for a rally. This lasted for a while, but O-Khan fired back with more grappling and more targeting limb work.

A quick side suplex from Shingo reset the match. Shingo followed up with a superplex. He then tried for Made in Japan but couldn’t get O-Khan up. After that didn’t work, he tried for pumping bomber, and each time, his targeted arm prevented the move from properly connecting. O-Khan then grabbed the arm and carried Shingo to the mat.

A pump kick from O-Khan opened the door for an Eliminator attempt. Shingo slipped free and hit the pumping bomber, but O-Khan kicked out. O-Khan then clubbed Shingo with a lariat and tried for a lariat again, but again, failed to connect.

Shingo tried for another bomber but was stuffed, leading to back-and-forth headbutts. O-Khan caught Shingo with a punch and transitioned into an arm breaker in the middle of the ring, nearly forcing the submission.

O-Khan went for an Eliminator attempt that Shingo reversed into a DDT. Shingo hit a German suplex and a pumping bomber with his other arm for a nearfall. He then landed Last of the Dragon and pinned O-Khan to win the match.

Shingo advances to face Zack Sabre Jr. in the Semi-Finals.

Yota Tsuji defeated Konosuke Takeshita

Takeshita secured an early lead, which he used to work over Tsuji on the mat. He tried following up with a senton from the top, but his injured knee slowed him down, allowing Tsuji to reverse and take control of the match. Tsuji then launched into an all-out attack on the knee after the door was opened.

Tsuji’s deliberate offense kept Takeshita grounded. Takeshita used Tsuji’s own speed to catch Tsuji with a lariat to reverse the match’s momentum. Takeshita followed up with a superplex before covering Tsuji with chairs and landing a senton to the floor.

Tsuji caught Takeshita with a backbreaker and a tope to re-assert his control. Takeshita fired back with a German before a double lariat left both men grounded.

Tsuji landed Raging Fire for a nearfall. He tried to close with Gene Blast, but Takeshita cut him off with a knee strike. Takeshita then climbed to the top, where Tsuji met him. Takeshita won out with a lariat, scoring him a nearfall of his own.

Takeshita tried for multiple lariats, but Tsuji refused to fall. Tsuji fired back with his own lariat and knee strike, followed by a barrage of slaps, a headbutt, and a curb stomp. When Tsuji tried his top rope stomp, Takeshita reversed into the blue thunder bomb.

Takeshita tried for Raging Fire, but Tsuji slipped free and hit the Gene Blaster. Takeshita used the rope to escape the pin, keeping his G1 alive. Tsuji tried for another, but Takeshita sidestepped it and hit a German. Before Takeshita could follow up, Tsuji bounced back, hit a second Gene Blaster, and won the match.

Tsuji will face Finlay in the semi-finals.

Big Audio Nightmare: NJPW G1 check-in, Stardom 5 Star GP preview

Image: NJPW

The Big Audio Nightmare is back as Mike Sempervive and I talk about everything happening in the very busy world of Japanese wrestling.

This week’s topics include:

  • A deep dive into the NJPW G1 Climax thus far
  • Thoughts on each wrestler’s performance and whether their stock has been raised or lowered
  • Best match of the tourney thoughts
  • Praise for the incredible match between Kaito Kiyomiya and Ryohei Oiwa from the N1 Victory tournament
  • A preview of Stardom’s 5 Star GP
  • Thoughts on the state of Marigold with Giulia on the way out

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)