NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 11 live results: Shingo vs. SANADA

Korakuen Hall will host today’s event featuring A Block action in the NJPW G1 Climax 34 tournament.

In the main event, 3-3 Shingo Takagi faces 3-3 SANADA in a matchup of former stablemates. It will be the first-ever singles meeting between Shingo & SANADA.

In the semi-main, 3-3 Tetsuya Naito takes on 3-3 Shota Umino. The two have met once before in singles competition, with Naito coming away with the victory that time.

5-1 EVIL faces 4-2 Zack Sabre Jr. in a matchup with the top spot in A Block on the line.

3-3 Gabe Kidd will take on 2-4 Jake Lee in another A Block battle.

Two members of United Empire will square off in the first tournament bout of the night, as 2-4 Great-O-Khan & 2-4 Callum Newman go head-to-head.

Today’s undercard:

  • Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma vs. David Finlay & Gedo
  • Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru vs. Yuya Uemura & TAKA Michinoku
  • Boltin Oleg, Toru Yano, El Phantasmo & Jado vs. Jeff Cobb, HENARE, Francesco Aklira & Konosuke Takeshita
  • Yota Tsuji & BUSHI vs. Shoma Kato & Katsuya Murashima

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Recommended Matches

Jake Lee vs. Gabe Kidd—This match was a total blast. Kidd brings an energy that very few people in the world can match. It was a great brawl and a fantastic change of pace from the rest of the card. I highly recommend giving this a watch.

Shingo Takagi vs. SANADA—If you’re a fan of Shingo Takagi, you’ll enjoy this match, no doubt. They kept a great pace, even as the match’s runtime climbed. This was more of a traditional G1 match, so if that’s what you’re here for, look no further.

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Undercard Results

BUSHI & Yota Tsuji defeated Katsuya Murashima & Shoma Kato

Konosuke Takeshita, Francesco Akira, HENARE & Jeff Cobb defeated El Phantasmo, Jado, Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano

Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated TAKA Michinoku & Yuya Uemura

Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma defeated David Finlay & Gedo

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Block A Results

Great-O-Khan defeated Callum Newman

Newman launched into a quick sequence to try and gain an early advantage. O-Khan managed to hold on until Newman landed a sudden kick that dropped O-Khan, securing Newman control. Instead of taking advantage, Newman postured to the crowd, allowing O-Khan to fire back and take control for himself.

After being worked over on the mat, Newman caught O-Khan with a stomp to work his way back into the match. Newman took advantage this time, landing a standing moonsault for a nearfall. When Newman attempted a tornado kick, O-Khan reversed into an arm drag for an attempted match reset, but Newman fired back with a standing Meteora to maintain his lead.

O-Khan interrupted the OsCutter, which led to a scramble for control. To end the scramble Newman went for a tornado kick, missed by a considerable amount, and still pinned O-Khan for a false finish. Newman went for the OsCutter again, but O-Khan stuffed it once more. He then transitioned into the Eliminator and pinned Newman to win the match.

This win puts O-Khan at 6 points. It also entirely eliminates Newman from playoff contention.

Jake Lee defeated Gabe Kidd

God, I loved this match. It was violent, efficient, and an all-round great time.

This was my favorite Jake Lee match in at least two years. Gabe Kidd is something special.

On his way to the ring, Lee entered with two cups of beer in his hand. Before he could give one to his faction mate, Kidd cut him off with a big boot, sending him to the floor. Kidd then grabbed a chair and slammed it over Lee’s head. Kidd then grabbed a mic and welcomed Lee to the Wardogs.

Kidd attempted to throw a table at Lee, but Lee avoided the furniture. Lee then hit Kidd with a knee and a chair strike of his own, leading to a fight deep in the crowd. Lee then drove Kidd into the table himself, headfirst.

Lee rolled Kidd into the ring, starting the match officially. Kidd took advantage of this pause by hitting Lee with a lariat and scoring a quick two count, nearly taking the match. Lee reversed Kidd’s driver attempt to start another back-and-forth, escalating with bigger and bigger moves. Lee eventually scored a nearfall with a chokeslam that slowed the match somewhat.

Lee tried for FBS, but Kidd cut him off with another substantial lariat. This led to a strike exchange in the center of the ring that favored Kidd. Kidd tried to follow up with a boot but missed, sending him into the ropes. This allowed Lee to hit a boot of his own that forced Kidd back to the floor. Lee tried to follow up with a kick from the apron, but Kidd pulled him into a suplex. Kidd attempted to follow up by running into Lee, but Lee sidestepped him, sending him crashing into the barricade. At this point, the referee’s count was too high for Kidd to beat, but Lee was in a position to slide into the ring, barely beating the count. Lee wins by countout.

Lee’s win puts him at 6 points, barely keeping him alive.

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated EVIL

Hey, at least it was short.

Before this match could begin, EVIL drug ZSJ to the ring with Dick Togo. They then threw powder in ZSJ’s face and hit him with the Magic Killer in the middle of the ring as the opening bell sounded. EVIL tried pinning ZSJ multiple times but failed. ZSJ then reversed into a pin of his own and won the match. In under 20 seconds, ZSJ won the match.

After the match, ZSJ celebrated in the crowd and EVIL chased him. This lasted significantly longer than the actual match.

This win puts ZSJ at the very top of the block with 10 points.

Tetsuya Naito defeated Shota Umino

This match really struggled to pick up until the very end, and even there, Naito’s weaknesses were all too clear. Umino also didn’t shine here, which is becoming a requirement for a great Naito match at this point. It wasn’t bad, but it’s not something I’d seek out.

Umino established a quick lead with a DDT to the apron, followed by a dropkick. A tornado DDT to the floor only cemented Umino’s early momentum, allowing him to hit an uncontested top rope dropkick and ignition for a quick two-count.

Naito hit an atomic drop and a neckbreaker from the top rope to slow Umino’s advance. To follow up, Naito hit a drop to the apron and the floor, buying him time to recover. Umino barely beat the referee’s count. Back in the ring, Naito maintained his lead with his signature offense.

Umino landed a dropkick to regain some footing. He followed up with a suplex for a two-count. After surviving an Umino exploder, Naito caught Umino in a leg-based Nelson, forcing Umino into the ropes. Naito then began to club on the neck of Umino, but Umino fired back with a sudden Blaze Blade to reset the match.

Umino hit a reverse twist and shout and trident for a nearfall, but Naito answered with Valencia. Naito’s Destino attempt was reversed into a fisherman’s suplex for a Umino two-count. Umino hit Blaze Blade again and a Death Rider for a finish. Umino attempted another Death Rider to close, but Naito transitioned into a Destino attempt that Umino reversed. The pair then struggled for a finish until Naito went for Destino again, but instead of driving Umino on his head, he transitioned into a trap pin. This was enough for him to win the match.

Naito advances to 8 points.

SANADA defeated Shingo Takagi

The opening moments of this match saw both men on equal footing. Shingo tried gaining the upper hand first with knee strikes to the midsection, but a well-placed dropkick from SANADA forced Shingo to the outside. SANADA’s pursuit to the floor was cut off when Shingo suplexed him onto the floor, establishing the first strong lead of the match.

On the outside, Shingo drove SANADA into the apron and barricade, furthering his control. Back inside, Shingo maintained his lead with deliberate offense, slowly picking apart SANADA.

SANADA landed a leg sweep to reset the match after an extended period on the back foot. He followed up with a dropkick and a plancha to establish control over Shingo for the first time this match.

A quick back-and-forth ended with a DDT from Shingo, leaving him back in the driver’s seat. The follow-up suplex scored Shingo at a two-count. The follow-up twist and shout and forced SANADA into the corner, but SANADA was able to fight out with a magic screw.

SANADA attempted a shining wizard but missed. Shingo was unable to follow up, however. SANADA hit the TKO to maintain his lead but missed the follow-up rounding body press. Shingo again failed to capitalize, allowing SANADA to hit the shining wizard on the second attempt.

Shingo blocked the next attempt at the shining wizard and tried for a leg whip, but SANADA slipped free. SANADA then tried for another shining wizard, which he hit. The follow-up rounding body press also connected for a SANADA nearfall.

SANADA tried to close with Deadfall, but Shingo reversed with a drop from the fireman’s carry position. Shingo kept the pressure up with a lariat in the corner, followed by a superplex. The sliding lariat scored Shingo a two-count. Shingo then hit SANADA with Made in Japan, but SANADA kicked out.

A struggle for control followed after SANADA survived Shingo’s finish attempt. SANADA blocked the pumping bomber only to eat a sliding forearm. Shingo then unloaded on SANADA with strikes and a shining wizard of his own. A pair of pumping bombers from Shingo seemingly marked the end for SANADA. As Shingo looked to close, SANADA transitioned into Deadfall, hit his finish, and pinned SANADA to win the match.

SANADA continues his advance with 8 points.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 10 live results: Tsuji vs. Narita

G1 Climax 34 action continues today with five B Block matches, including Yota Tsuji vs. Ren Narita in the main event.

Tsuji is 2-3 in the tournament with 4 points, while Narita is 3-2 with 6 points. The duo have met seven times previously in singles bouts, with Narita holding a 5-1-1 edge.

3-2 Konosuke Takeshita will take on 2-3 Hirooki Goto in the semi-main event spot on today’s card.

3-2 Jeff Cobb vs. 3-2 HENARE, 3-2 Yuya Uemura vs. 1-4 El Phantasmo, and 2-3 Oleg Boltin/Boltin Oleg vs. 3-2 David Finlay round out today’s G1 Climax tournament bouts.

Today’s undercard features three tag team matches:

  • Tetsuya Naito & Shingo Takagi vs. SANADA & TAKA Michinoku
  • Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi, Shoma Kato & Toru Yano vs. Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman & Francesco Akira

Today’s show from Dolphin’s Arena in Nagoya streams on NJPW World beginning at 3 a.m. Eastern time.

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Recommended Match

Hirooki Goto vs. Konosuke Takeshita – This is the only thing I would go out of my way to see. If you’re a fan of the all-out style the G1 is known for or high-octane wrestling in general, give this one a watch.

**********

Undercard Results

Callum Newman, Francesco Akira & Great-O-Khan defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi, Toru Yano, & Shoma Kato

Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee defeated Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma

Shingo Takagi & Tetsuya Naito defeated SANADA & TAKA Michinoku

**********

David Finlay defeated Oleg Boltin

I thoroughly enjoyed this match. Oleg was allowed to be the strong-man grappler he needed to be, while Finlay was a smart heel who deserved the win. Good stuff.

Oleg opened the match by wrestling Finlay to the mat. He then turned to tackles before setting up for a gut-wrench suplex that forced Finlay to flee to the floor. When Finlay returned to the ring, he spat in Oleg’s eyes and baited him into an overextension. This allowed Finlay to drive Oleg into the barricade, taking control of the match.

Back in the ring, Finlay took his time, slowly picking apart Oleg with basic, demoralizing offense. When Finlay tried for a more substantial move, Oleg caught him with a sudden drop and a flurry of solid strikes. Oleg’s transition to more significant moves was much more successful than Finlay’s, lasting until he attempted the Boltin Bomb.

After stuffing Boltin’s signature, Finlay delivered an Irish Curse backbreaker for a nearfall. When Finlay tried to follow up, Oleg cut him off with a massive belly-to-belly suplex. Oleg then tried for the Boltin Bomb again, and this time, he hit it.

After Finlay kicked out of the Boltin Bomb, a strike exchange followed. Finlay won out with a lariat off the ropes. Finlay followed up with the Finlay Roll for a nearfall, but Oleg answered with a German suplex. Oleg then hit the Kamikaze once, but Finlay slipped free from the second. Finlay answered Oleg with a powerbomb and the Overkill. He then pinned Oleg to win the match.

This win leaves Finlay with 8 points, making him the leader of B Block.

El Phantasmo defeated Yuya Uemura

This match did basically nothing for me. Even with the high-impact moments, it felt lifeless for basically all of its runtime.

Uemura established an early lead by utilizing arm drags. When ELP tried firing back with chops, Uemura answered with more intense chops of his own. ELP ended Uemura’s advance with a nasty suplex into the ropes that slowed the match to a halt.

After some work to the neck, Uemura began to fight back with more strikes to ELP. Mixed in with his chops, Uemura targeted ELP’s arm, taking him to the mat when the opportunity was available. ELP answered with a rana and a massive tope to end Uemura’s rally. An even more impressive plancha from ELP cemented his lead.

Back in the ring, ELP hit a senton and a moonsault for a nearfall. Uemura answered by wrestling for control of the arm. Uemura then climbed to the top rope, but ELP cut him off with a DDT and a burning hammer. ELP then hit a Thunderkiss 86, but Uemura kicked out.

When ELP attempted the Canadian revolution, Uemura slipped free. ELP held on, leading to a quick exchange of suplexes. Uemura scored a nearfall with a dragon suplex. Uemura, looking to close pulled ELP in for the deadbolt. ELP reversed into a trap pin, stealing a quick win.

This win leaves ELP with 4 points.

Jeff Cobb defeated HENARE

This match was solid but not something I’d go out of my way to see. It was a relatively plotting Cobb performance, which was fine but not extraordinary, especially compared to some of his other work from this tournament.

This match opened with a respectful collar-and-elbow tie-up. A strike exchange and some back-and-forth shoulder checks followed. Cobb, the physically larger man, won out with a leaping tackle, allowing him to launch into his first stent of control.

HENARE landed multiple strikes that seemingly opened a door, but Cobb managed to stay in control for a long time following the opening bell. After delivering a massive superplex to HENARE, Cobb hit a standing moonsault for a nearfall, only furthering his lead.

After an extended period on the back foot, HENARE finally delivered a knee in the corner to gain some footing in this match. He followed up with a powerful sequence of moves, including a Bezerker bomb for a two count.

Cobb answered HENARE’s rally with a German suplex, which HENARE ignored. HENARE then hit Rampage before trying for his finish. Cobb avoided the end and hit a lariat to reset the match in his favor.

When Cobb tried for Tour of the Islands, HENARE slipped free. HENARE then ran at Cobb, but Cobb caught him, leading to the F-5000. Cobb then called HENARE to his feet and delivered Tour of the Islands to win the match.

Cobb joins Finlay at the top of the pack with 8 points.

Hirooki Goto defeated Konosuke Takeshita

This was a bombastic, over-the-top, action-packed match. When you think G1, this kind of match comes to mind.

After some light back and forth, Takeshita hit his Takeshita line to establish an early lead. In follow-up, Takeshita landed a DDT on the floor

and the apron. Back in the ring, Takeshita toyed with Goto, giving him the opportunity to fight back into the match. Goto tried to challenge Takeshita with strikes but ultimately failed, leaving Takeshita with an even more substantial lead.

Goto eventually landed a lariat to reset the match. He followed up with a spinning wheel kick and Saito suplex to gain his own lead, but Takeshita answered with a rana and a tope con hilo to re-establish control. Back in the ring, Takeshita hit his knee strike, but Goto answered with a Ushigoroshi for another proper reset.

Both men traded forearms in the center of the ring until Takeshita could land the blue thunder bomb. Takeshita then positioned Goto on the top rope, but Goto cut him off with a sunset flip from the top. When Goto tried to follow up, Takeshita reversed into a driver and wheelbarrow German. Goto immediately responded with a lariat that knocked Takeshita off his feet.

Goto dropped Takeshita with a kick to the chest and a GTW for a nearfall. When he tried for the finish, Takeshita reversed into the brainbuster. Takeshita tried for his finish, but Goto slipped free, allowing Goto to hit Shouten Kai; Takeshita kicked out. Both men then clonked heads; Takeshita fell, but Goto didn’t. This allowed Goto to hit GTR and pin Takeshita to win the match.

This win puts Goto at 6 points, leaving him positioned in the middle of the pack.

Yota Tsuji defeated Ren Narita

This was bad.

Before the match could even begin, Narita jumped Tsuji. He then threw Tsuji into the barricades and stretched him against the ring post. Narita launched Tsuji into a row of chairs before attacking him with said furniture.

When they finally made it to the ring, Narita began to attack Tsuji’s leg. Tsuji tried to answer Narita’s assault with a rana, but his leg failed him, allowing Narita to lock in a Boston crab. Once the hold was dropped, the leg based attack continued.

A lung blower followed by a suplex left Tsuji in control for the first time. It didn’t take long, though, for Narita to land a pump kick in the corner, allowing him to take the match back to the mat.

Tsuji managed to lock in his own Boston crab to return the favor. The follow-up backbreaker and curb stomp left Tsuji in a relatively strong position. He set up for the Gene Blaster, but Narita caught him, trapping him with a leg lock.

Tsuji dropped Narita with a headbutt and a powerbomb that resulted in a nearfall. Narita answered by driving Tsuji into the referee, hitting Tsuji with his guillotine knee, and grabbing his pushup bar. Tsuji ducked the pushup bar and tried to continue his attack. Narita answered by shoving Tsuji back in the direction of the recovering referee and delivering a low blow. Narita then hit another knee, this time from the second rope, resulting in a false finish.

Narita tried choking Tsuji, but Tsuji returned the favor before delivering a powerbomb. When Tsuji tried for the Gene Blast, he ran into the exposed corner, allowing Narita to target the leg once again. Narita attempted the Double Cross, but Tsuji stuffed it. Tsuji then hit a knee strike and a Gene Blast spear to win the match.

Tsuji also advances to 6 points.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night four results, updated standings

Night four of NJPW’s G1 Climax took place in Kagawa on Thursday with the B Block in action.

Among the highlights were Yuya Uemura staying undefeated and Konosuke Takeshita and HENARE both being dealt their first losses. Here are the full results and updated standings:

NJPW G1 Climax night four results

  • B Block: Yuya Uemura defeated Konosuke Takeshita
  • B Block: David Finlay defeated HENARE
  • B Block: El Phantasmo defeated Yota Tsuji
  • B Block: Ren Narita defeated Jeff Cobb
  • B Block: Hirooki Goto defeated Oleg Boltin
  • Tetsuya Naito & Shingo Takagi defeated EVIL & Dick Togo
  • Jake Lee & Gabe Kidd defeated Zack Sabre Jr. & Kosei Fujita
  • Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman & Francesco Akira defeated Shota Umino, Tomoaki Honma & Shoma Kato
  • SANADA & TAKA Michinoku defeated Toru Yano & Katsuya Murashima

Current standings

A Block

  • Zack Sabre Jr. (3-0): 6 points
  • EVIL (3-0): 6 points
  • Shingo Takagi (2-1): 4 points
  • Gabe Kidd (2-1): 4 points
  • Callum Newman: (1-2): 2 points
  • SANADA (1-2): 2 points
  • Shota Umino (1-2): 2 points
  • Tetsuya Naito (1-2): 2 points
  • Jake Lee (1-2): 2 points
  • Great-O-Khan (0-3) 0 points

B Block

  • Yuya Uemura (3-0): 6 points
  • Konosuke Takeshita (2-1): 4 points
  • HENARE (2-1): 4 points
  • Ren Narita (2-1): 4 points
  • Jeff Cobb (1-2): 2 points
  • El Phantasmo (1-2): 2 points
  • Yota Tsuji (1-2): 2 points
  • Hirooki Goto (1-2): 2 points
  • Oleg Boltin (1-2): 2 points
  • David Finlay (1-2): 2 points

The tournament picks back up on Saturday with an event featuring A Block matches:

Night five lineup —

  • A Block: Tetsuya Naito vs. EVIL
  • A Block: Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jake Lee
  • A Block: Shota Umino vs. Great-O-Khan
  • A Block: SANADA vs. Gabe Kidd
  • A Block: Shingo Takagi vs. Callum Newman
  • Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma vs. Yota Tsuji & BUSHI
  • David Finlay & Gedo vs. Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Yuya Uemura & TAKA Michinoku vs. Jeff Cobb & Francesco Akira
  • El Phantasmo & Jado vs. Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano
  • Shoma Kato & Katsuya Murashima vs. HENARE & Konosuke Takeshita

We’re Live, Pal: AEW TV rights update, what we love about wrestling

It’s another episode of We’re Live, Pal which is also available for free on YouTube below. Andrew Zarian and I are back for the first time in a month to talk about what’s going on in wrestling today.

We talked about the current AEW TV rights situation including when the deal could possibly be done with WBD as well as thoughts on how close to the actual finish line AEW might be.

Then we talked about what we love currently in pro wrestling which included:

  • Drew McIntyre vs. CM Punk
  • The AEW women’s division
  • NJPW G1 tournament
  • TNA & NXT crossover

You can follow us on Twitter.

For website subscribers, you can click here to listen (sub needed).

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night two results: Tsuji vs. Finlay

Nine tournament matches are set for night two of NJPW’s G1 Climax 34.

In the main event, Los Ingobernables de Japon’s Yota Tsuji will face Bullet Club’s David Finlay in a B Block matchup.

Tsuji and Finlay have squared off once before in singles competition in their careers, with Finlay scoring the victory.

18 of 20 competitors will be in action on tonight’s card, with B Block’s Konosuke Takeshita and Jeff Cobb the only tournament wrestlers not taking part in today’s show. As with yesterday, every bout in today’s lineup is a tournament match.

The full card for Sunday’s show:

  • B Block: Yota Tsuji vs. David Finlay
  • A Block: Tetsuya Naito vs. Zack Sabre Jr.
  • A Block: Shota Umino vs. Shingo Takagi
  • B Block: Hirooki Goto vs. Yuya Uemura
  • A Block: Jake Lee vs. EVIL
  • B Block: El Phantasmo vs. Ren Narita
  • A Block: Great-O-Khan vs. Gabe Kidd
  • B Block: Oleg Boltin vs. HENARE
  • A Block: SANADA vs. Callum Newman

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Recommended Matches
HENARE vs. Oleg Boltin – This was a rad hoss match. I really can’t get enough of Oleg.

Yuya Uemura vs. Hirooki Goto – This is probably the match with best executed narrative of the tournament so far. It also seems as if Uemura is also finding his footing again, so that’s exciting.

Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Tetsuya Naito – This is one of the better Naito matches as of late. It’s exactly the kind of match he needs to be working. It’s filled with slick sequences and felt like it could end any moment.

Yota Tsuji vs. David Finlay – If you enjoy main event New Japan, this is for you. It built to a crescendo filled with reversals and potential finishes.

SANADA defeated Callum Newman

SANADA worked a somewhat meaner match here tonight than usual, building on his shocking sub-five-minute loss from last night. The match itself was a fine little thing. I would say it outperformed my expectations.

Newman and SANADA opened the match with a basic feeling-out process until a dropkick sent SANADA to the floor. Newman attempted a dive in follow-up but missed, allowing SANADA to answer with a magic screw. He then dropped Newman on the barricade before bringing the match back to the ring.

In the ring, Newman connected with a stomp to the back that opened SANADA up to a bit of offense. It only lasted a moment, though, as SANADA cut him off with a magic screw, bringing the match back into the hands of the former World’s champion.

SANADA hit a shining wizard but missed the rounding body press, leaving Newman free to answer with a sudden knee strike. Newman followed up with a quick dropkick in the corner, but the double stomp follow-up whiffed. SANADA tried to reply with a shining wizard, but that missed, too. After Newman overshot another kick, SANDA managed to lock in skull end, but Newman reversed into a cutter. Newman attempted to close with the OsCutter, but SANADA cut him off, landed Deadfall, and pinned him.

SANADA secures his first win of the tournament, putting him at 2 points.

HENARE defeats Oleg Boltin

This match was great. It was super simple, to the point, and fantastically executed.

A powerful collar-and-elbow opened this match. Once that proved insufficient, they moved to trading strikes. Once that wasn’t enough, they moved to tackles. Oleg’s tackle was enough to knock HENARE to the floor, securing the first lead of the match.

HENARE answered Oleg’s lead with high leg kicks. Once Oleg fell to his knees, HENARE took off his head with a kick to the jaw. HENARE then placed Oleg in the corner and unloaded with more strikes. Oleg answered with a powerful slam, which forced HENARE into the corner.

Oleg threw HENARE across the ring before attempting his finish, but HENARE slipped free. HENARE then landed a kick from the rope, knocking Oleg to the mat. HENARE followed up with a disgusting knee strike that rattled Oleg’s jaw.

With the finish in sight, HENARE waited in the corner, but somehow, Oleg cut him off with a dropkick. Oleg responded with a kamikaze, scoring a convincing nearfall. To my knowledge, this was the first time someone has kicked out of that move.

Having survived Oleg’s finish, HENARE slipped free of the second attempt, leading to a struggle for control. HENARE tried for a submission but couldn’t get it; instead, a back-and-forth strike battle followed. HENARE won out with a strong kick and a flying headbutt. He then landed Streets of Rage and pinned Oleg to win the match.

HENARE now leads B Block with 4 points.

Gabe Kidd defeated Great-O-Khan

I almost enjoyed this match, but it had too many issues in the end to look past. O-Khan’s performance was above average, and Kidd was decent. The structure of the match really hurt it, though. There was just far too much going on.

Kidd dared O-Khan to wrestle as the match opened but caught him with a few strikes as soon as there was an opening. O-Khan answered Kidd’s cuteness with a throw, a suplex, and a lariat that knocked Kidd to the floor. O-Khan then drove Kidd into the barricade, daring Kidd to a brawl instead of a match classic, to which Kidd accepted.

Kidd and O-Khan brawled from one side of the crowd to the other. By the time they emerged, Kidd had control. He then led O-Khan back to the ring, where he drove O-Khan into the post before calling out Hiromu Takahashi.

As soon as the match returned to the ring, O-Khan dumped Kidd to the floor. O-Khan landed a plancha, securing a lead before throwing Kidd into a barricade and a sea of chairs. O-Khan then tied up Kidd with chairs before dragging him back to the ring.

Back in the ring, a suplex attempt led to both men falling over the top rope and crashing over the top rope back to the floor. As the count began to climb, the men started trading strikes, meandering away from the ring. Once the count hit 19, they sprinted together to beat the referee.

Back inside, they traded strikes and German suplexes before O-Khan hit a GFO to establish a lead. He then tried for the eliminator but failed, leading to a scramble for control. In the end, Kidd won out with a massive lariat that won him the match.

Kidd is on the board with 2 points.

Ren Narita defeated El Phantasmo

ELP has lost all his friends, and he is sad. That is the story of his G1.

A quick boot from Narita opened this match, catching the depressed ELP off guard. He managed to rebound with a dropkick to reset the match in his favor.

After knocking Narita to the mat and landing a plancha, ELP started trying for more and more dives. Eventually, ELP missed, opening the door back up for Narita. Narita whipped ELP into the barricade and hit him with a chair after distracting the referee.

Back in the ring, Narita began to brutalize ELP’s leg. As ELP fought back through the attack, he continued to use acrobatic offense while attempting to sell the damage done to his limb (until he fired up and began jumping on it).

After stomping on Narita in the corner, ELP grabbed Narita’s pushup bar. Narita dared him to use it. After thinking about it, he decided not to. Narita tried to follow up with the Double Cross, but ELP reversed. Narita still maintained control, though with a quick guillotine.

Narita climbed to the top rope, where ELP cut him off with a rana. ELP followed up with a Thunderkiss 86 for a nearfall. Before he could follow up, the referee was shoved to the ground. Narita then hit Double Cross and won the match.

Ren Narita has slipped his first 2 points.

EVIL defeated Jake Lee

Ah, this is what I’ve come to expect from Jake Lee and EVIL. This match was slow, tedious, and filled with cheap cheating. This was horrible.

Before the action could begin, EVIL offered Lee a “Too Sweet” in traditional Bullet Club fashion. It looked like Lee would accept, but instead, he poked EVIL and Dick Togo in the eyes, Three Stooges style. He then threw EVIL to the floor and threatened to stomp Togo below the belt before letting him go.

Once the match officially began, Lee choked EVIL against the rope, leading to him fleeing almost imidatly. When Lee followed him, EVIL whipped him into the barricade and choked him with cables. Back in the ring, EVIL maintained his lead by distracting the referee and utilizing Togo.

After minutes on the back foot, Lee fought back with a Boston crab. This led to a fake bell ring, a ref bump, and Togo hitting the ring. Lee managed to fight through the interference as the referee recovered, leading to a chokeslam for a nearfall. During the scuffle, EVIL managed to rake Lee’s eyes, leading to him missing the Face Break Shot. Once he missed his finish, Togo threw powder in his eyes, EVIL landed Everything is Evil and pinned Lee to win the match.

EVIL is now the A Block leader with 4 points.

Yuya Uemura defeated Hirooki Goto

This was a rock-solid generational gap match. Goto tried his best to learn Uemura, but failed.

Goto wrestled Uemura to the ground as the match began, but Uemura held his own in the opening scramble. Goto then tried to ground Uemura with a shoulder tackle, but Uemura fired back with a dropkick. Uemura then placed Goto in the corner, where he unloaded with strikes that forced the referee to become involved. This unsportsmanlike behavior upset Goto, leading to a fiery response filled with harsh strikes.

Goto continued his act of discipline by locking in a Bostin crab in the middle of the ring. Once Uemura escaped, he landed an arm drag and a dropkick to reset the match. Uemura flew too close to the sun again when he climbed to the top rope; Goto avoided his dive and responded with a quick Ushigoroshi to regain his footing once more.

After a strike exchange, Goto hit a GTW for a nearfall. When Goto tried following up with a knee strike, Uemura caught him and answered with a headbutt. He tried for the deadbolt suplex, but Goto reversed, leading to a quick back and forth with both men slipping in and out of each other’s finish. In the end, it was Uemura who was able to hit the deadbolt suplex, which won him the match.

Uemura keeps the pace with 4 points.

Shota Umino defeated Shingo Takagi

I didn’t love this. The mid-match pacing felt sluggish, and it picked up at the end. This was the second-longest match of the tournament so far, and I felt every second.

This match was all Shingo until the final stretch. The narrative was that Umino refused to quit, but Shingo outclassed him in every way.

Umino rushed Shingo as the match began, hitting him with a dropkick and a flurry of forearms in the corner in an attempt to gain an early advantage. Shingo fired back with forearms of his own to fight out of the corner. From here, the pair fought to the apron, where Shingo dropped Umino on his back before whipping him into the barricade.

Back in the ring, Shingo utilized basic holds to wear down Umino. Umino answered with a sudden DDT to the apron. When Umino attempted to follow up, Shingo suplexed him into the corner, retaking control. He then used slightly more impactful offense to stay ahead until Umino landed an exploder suplex from the top rope.

As soon it looked like Shota had a chance, Shingo landed a lariat to retake the lead. This time, he landed a superplex, a sliding lariat, and a senton, all in quick succession. A quick DDT from Umino allowed him another moment to breathe, but again, Shingo responded by driving him into the corner moments later. The pumping bomber that followed was the icing on the cake.

Knowing that the end was in sight, Shingo landed another pumping bomber. He then hit Made in Japan, but Umino kicked out. When he tried for Last of the Dragon but, Umino wiggled free. Umino then managed to hit another DDT to buy even more time.

Shingo managed to hit another partial pumping bomber, but Umino fired back with a half-dragon suplex. Umino then landed Blaze Blade for a nearfall of his own. When Umino tried for Death Rider, Shingo blocked, leading to a quick back and forth. Shingo then ran at Umino; Umino caught him and landed the Death Rider, leaving him with the win.

Umino has earned his first 2 points.

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Tetsuya Naito

This was a match that managed to cover Naito’s growing weaknesses exceptionally well. The sequences were slick and smart, and it felt like it could end at any moment. Great stuff.

ZSJ offered Naito a LIJ salute to open the match; Naito responded by spitting in ZSJ’s face. ZSJ then clobbered Naito with some elbows before Naito tried for a quick pin. This led to a sequence of rapid pin attempts from both men, any of which could’ve believably ended the match.

An exchange on the mat that initially favored Naito eventually left ZSJ in control. ZSJ then leveled Naito with uppercuts before returning to some methodical grappling. When Naito tried to challenge ZSJ’s control, ZSJ tied him up in the rope and dragged him to the floor to continue his assault.

A quick hangman’s neckbreaker to the floor put Naito in control for the first time in this match. Naito then turned to the neck, as you would expect. But just as Naito found his groove, he paused, allowing ZSJ to catch him and bring him to the mat.

ZSJ worked over Naito until he was able to land PK. ZSJ tried to follow up with the Zack Driver, but Naito reversed into Destino. This took so much out of both men that it effectively reset the match.

From a standing position, both men began trading strikes. This lasted until Naito dropped ZSJ with elbows to the neck. Two quick pin attempts followed. Once that didn’t work, another short strike exchange happened. Then ZSJ trapped Naito in a pin and won the match.

After the match, ZSJ posed Naito’s belt before he walked to the back.

ZSJ is still undefeated, having defeated the reigning IWGP World Heavyweight Champion and earning his 4th point in A Block.

Yota Tsuji defeated David Finlay

Tonight’s main event opened Tsuji, landing a rana that sent Finlay to the floor and a follow-up rana. Tsuji then whipped Finlay into the barricade to establish a strong lead, which he maintained by locking in a Boston crab.

Finlay spat in Tsuji’s face to buy some separation, which he used to drive Tsuji to the top of the ring post. He then tossed Tsuji across the ring before landing some knee strikes to Tsuji’s midsection. A stomp from Tsuji in the corner seemingly stopped Finlay’s offense, but he quickly responded by shoving Tsuji to the ground. On the outside, Finlay shoved Tsuji into the barricades and threw him into the ring post. Back in the ring, Finlay landed a Dominator for a two-count.

When Finlay tried for Oblivion, Tsuji reversed into a suplex. He then delivered a second stomp. When two stomps proved insufficient, Tsuji tried a third. A brutal knee and a power drive from Tsuji seemingly furthered this lead by setting up the Gene Blast.

When Tsuji attempted tried for his Gene Blast spear, Finlay rolled through and hit Oblivion; Tsuji kicked out. Finlay followed up with three powerbombs, setting up Overkill. When he tried for the Overkill, Tsuji rolled him up, nearly stealing a win. Finlay answered with a lariat.

After five forearms from Finlay, Tsuji threw a headbutt that rocked Finlay. This opened the door for a sudden Gene Blast, but Finlay rolled onto his stomach. Tsuji didn’t waste time, though; he followed his spear with his rope-assisted stomp Malo Crash and pinned Finlay, winning the match.

Tsuji ends the night by getting points on the board. He sits at 2 points.

A Block Standings

EVIL – 4 Points
Zack Sabre Jr. – 4 Points
SANADA – 2 Points
Callum Newman – 2 Points
Gabe Kidd – 2 Points
Jake Lee – 2 Points
Shota Umino – 2 Points
Shingo Takagi – 2 Points
Great-O-Khan – 0 Points
Tetsuya Naito – 0 Points

B Block Standings

HENARE – 4 Points
Yuya Uemura – 4 Points
Oleg Boltin – 2 Points
Ren Narita – 2 Points
Yota Tsuji – 2 Points
Jeff Cobb – 2 Points
Konosuke Takeshita – 2 Points
David Finlay – 0 Points
Hirooki Goto – 0 Points
El Phantasmo – 0 Points

Wrestling Observer Live: Recaps of WWE SmackDown & the first night of the G1

There’s a lot to cover on this Saturday edition of Wrestling Observer Live.

  • Friday’s WWE SmackDown
  • A newsworthy night one of the NJPW G1 Climax
  • TNA Slammiversary
  • AEW Rampage
  • AEW Collision begins its residency in Arlington
  • Plus GCW, CMLL, Hulk Hogan and more.

Catch up on about a week’s worth of wrestling in one show.

Click here to listen (sub required)

Final two wrestlers qualify for NJPW G1 Climax

Callum Newman and Oleg Boltin are both set to compete in their first-ever G1 Climax.

The finals of NJPW’s G1 qualifier tournament took place on Friday with Newman earning the last spot in A Block and Boltin earning the last B Block spot. In the tournament finals, Newman defeated YOSHI-HASHI and Boltin defeated Taichi.

The qualifier tournament proved to be a way for NJPW to add two fresh faces to the G1 while having some mainstays miss out. Hiroshi Tanahashi, Tomohiro Ishii, and Toru Yano are among the veterans who lost in the tournament and will be missing the G1. This will be the first G1 without Tanahashi since 2001, the first without Ishii since 2012, and the first without Yano since 2006.

Newman won matches against YOSHI-HASHI, KENTA, and Yujiro Takahashi during the qualifier tournament. Boltin’s victories were against Taichi, Tanahashi, and Yano.

The G1 begins on July 20 and runs through August 18. Here is the full list of participants:

A Block:

  • Tetsuya Naito
  • Shota Umino
  • Shingo Takagi
  • SANADA
  • Great-O-Khan
  • Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Gabe Kidd
  • EVIL
  • Jake Lee
  • Callum Newman

B Block:

  • Hirooki Goto
  • El Phantasmo
  • Yota Tsuji
  • Yuya Uemura
  • Jeff Cobb
  • Henare
  • David Finlay
  • Ren Narita
  • Konosuke Takeshita
  • Oleg Boltin