New Japan Cup night one live results: Matches canceled due to ring issue

The 2025 New Japan Cup kicks off today with two opening round matches in the single-elimination tournament.

In the main event, EVIL will face Yota Tsuji in a Bullet Club House of Torture vs. Los Ingobernables de Japon battle. The winner will advance to a matchup against David Finlay on the March 11 event.

Yuya Uemura faces SANADA in the semi-main in the night’s only other tournament bout. The winner will move on to face YOSHI-HASHI in the second round on March 11.

Finlay, YOSHI-HASHI, Zack Sabre Jr., Taichi, Shingo Takagi, TJP, Jeff Cobb, and Shota Umino were all awarded first round byes in this year’s 24-man tournament.

The eventual New Japan Cup winner will challenge the IWGP World Heavyweight Champion at Sakura Genesis on April 5 in the main event of that show. Hirooki Goto currently holds the IWGP World title, but must defend it on March 15 against Yuji Nagata.

Five tag team matches fill out today’s undercard. The show streams live from Korakuen Hall beginning at 4:30 AM Eastern time.

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Special Announcement from President Hiroshi Tanahashi

Tanahashi addressed the Korakuen Hall tonight in full entrance gear. Thanking the crowd for their time, Tanahashi announced that the matches for the New Japan Cup as advertised were cancelled. Due to a broken ring post, the matches tonight couldn’t proceed as planned, for wrestler and crew safety. Members of the roster entered the ring to greet the crowd.

TAKA Michinoku and Yuya Uemura appear

Michinoku briefly addressed the crowd before leaving them with Uemura. Decked out in full gear and unsure what else to do, Uemura smiled and waved as he greeted the Tokyo crowd and left.

Hartley Jackson and Ryohei Oiwa appear

Jackson jokingly professed he broke the ring with his weight. Oiwa agreed, to which Jackson raised his can of beer. Thanking the audience for their time, the TMDK members removed their shirts and left; Hartley built up to his disrobing.

Francesco Akira, Jeff Cobb, Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman, and Jakob Austin Young appear

Khan thanked the crowd for their time, but shifted blame from Jackson to himself, due to his great love and spirit for the NJPW ring. Akira broke up Khan’s speech, declaring that the United Empire should do their “official” pose, essentially being the Ginyu Force team pose from the anime, “Dragon Ball Z.” They repeated this pose to several angles for the crowd. Cobb concluded this by slamming Young to the mat and helping him back up. Akira politely held the imaginary ropes open for his teammates so they could exit the ring.

The crowd got their money’s worth with the Dragon Ball Z reference. And now I want any and every subsequent speech tonight to have someone taking the blame way from someone else and onto themselves for the ring post’s current status.

Los Ingobernables de Japon appear

LIJ emerged, with Hiromu Takahashi and Yota Tsuji still adorned in full gear. BUSHI invasively inspected the broken ring post, tapped it lovingly, and took a photo of it. Thanking the crowd, the team said no more. Naito and BUSHI did their signature poses, while Takahashi and Tsuji held aloft their IWGP Tag Team Championship and IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship respectively.

BULLET CLUB War Dogs appear

Gedo boasted the War Dogs’s dominance and told the Korakuen Hall audience to hurry up and take their photos and leave. That was it.

Hiroshi Tanahashi reappeared

Main event Tanahashi addressed the crowd once more. With 40 minutes left to broadcast, The Ace took the time to call out Toru Yano. Yano excitedly entered the ring. He was then followed in succession by Hirooki Goto, El Desperado, El Phantasmo, and Jado.

Phantasmo asked if Desperado wanted to kiss, to which the latter became extremely bashful. Tanahashi then ordered them to kiss, further adding shyness to the grinning Desperado. They obliged, and Phantasmo proceeded to kiss Tanahashi and earned a peck on the cheek by Goto. Yano had sneakily fled to the audience, so Phantasmo searched him out and they kissed within the Korakuen Hall crowd.

Yuji Nagata, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Satoshi Kojima, and Tiger Mask appear

The tone changed when Nagata addressed his ucoming match with Goto on the 15th. Tenzan, Kojima, and Tiger Mask then lightened the mood with their brief speeches.

Sit-down with Nagata, Tanahashi, and Goto

An audience member asked how Goto’s children reacted to his title win. He responded that they fell asleep at the television by the time of Goto’s match.

Nagata told stories of previous IWGP World Heavyweight Championship matches.

Goto mentioned that their upcoming match is a full-circle moment for him, as he used to carry Nagata’s bags as a younger wrestler.

Honestly, this was a relaxing two hours of non-wrestling fun with the NJPW roster. This may go on record as one of the most wholesome nights of the company. Seeing everyone peel back and have a good time was refreshing. I like how some wrestlers remained in full gear, either planned or unplanned. The crowd getting to see them in wrestling form without actually wrestling was undoubtedly a treat considering the unexpected circumstances. Send them home happy.

NJPW The New Beginning in Osaka live results: Sabre vs. Goto, Young Bucks vs. LIJ

NJPW The New Beginning in Osaka streams live tonight with five title matches.

In the main event, Zack Sabre Jr. defends the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship against Hirooki Goto with the storyline being that this may be Goto’s last chance to win the World title, a belt that has eluded him throughout his career.

IWGP Global Champion Yota Tsuji puts his title on the line against Gabe Kidd in the semi-main event as the duo meet for the 22nd time in singles competition in their career, most of those coming in opening matches as Young Lions early in their careers.

The Young Bucks return to action on the show as they defend the IWGP Tag Team titles against Tetsuya Naito and Hiromu Takahashi.

NEVER Openweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Oleg Boltin in another title match on the show.

Ichiban Sweet Boys (Robbie Eagles & Kosei Fujita) put their IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team titles up for grabs against the Roppongi ReVice duo of Rocky Romero and YOH in the night’s other title bout.

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Pre-show

United Empire (Francesco Akira and Jeff Cobb) defeated El Desperado and Katsuya Murashima

Osaka rose to life as Akira and Desperado started the evening’s proceedings. Murashima took it from there, but couldn’t handle the speed of Akira, nor the strength of Cobb. Murashima employed a desperate dropkick to buy enough time to tag Desperado. Overwhelming the mighty Cobb, Desperado suffered a plancha and a flying top rope crossbody from Akira. On the precipice of a Tiger Driver on Cobb, Desperado’s last effort was thwarted by a leaping Akira’s roll-up pin for the victory.

— Post-match: Akira and Desperado had a staredown as they cemented a match for Desperado’s IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship on March 3, at the NJPW 53rd Anniversary Event.

Cobb’s power and Murashima’s burgeoning young story were a nice backdrop to what’ll be an exciting match between Akira and Desperado. Some fine selling by the Junior Heavyweight champ.

Main card

Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Togi Makabe

Makabe instantly got the advantage over the Ace, but Tanahashi powered through after a forearm exchange and a senton. Makabe nearly won after a scoop slam and a German Suplex, but missed on King Kong Kneedrop. Both competitors weakened, Tanahashi opted for a Slingblade and a High Fly Flow, the latter of which failed to put Makabe away. Tanahashi reversed Makabe’s King Kong Lariat into a bridged pin for the 3-count.

At their age, the experience of maximizing match time made this enjoyable. Moreover, with the story of Tanahashi’s body breaking down after such a long career keeps his story compelling until the bittersweet ending at the finale of his career. Not a glorious standout, but one I’d wager to be a revisit when all is said and done.

Drilla Moloney defeated Shingo Takagi

What started off as a standard feeling-out process quickly trancended into acrobatic and stiff territory as though both men had to win the match immediately and with hate. Takagi’s normally brutal chops were no-sold by Moloney, and his German Suplexes were no match for the Young War Dog’s. Reeling from a gnarly Spinebuster, Takagi rolled meekly to the outside, clutching his head. Moloney dragged his corpse to the outside, tossing him carelessly into some chairs; a fan in attendance left his seat amid the carnage looking mildly inconvenienced.

Back in the ring, Takagi evaded a Drilla Killa, instead striking with an elbow, chop, and lariat. A Vertical Suplex from the top rope crushed Moloney but couldn’t help land a Made in Japan. Moloney earned a reprieve with a gore that stopped the Last Dragon but could not slay him. Moloney used his own Made in England, but it wasn’t enough. Osaka roared after Takagi did a Sliding Lariat and a Pumping Bomber, but were left aghast as Moloney attempted a successful Drilla Killa for the win.

Moloney stood to gain so much from this and they pulled the trigger. Easily one of the top matches of the night. I firmly believe investing in these young talents can bring in another great period for NJPW, maybe another boom period. With performances like Moloney’s I’m confident in that. Moloney has the makings of a great NEVER Openweight Champion, possibly more.

Great-O-Khan defeated Shota Umino

Osaka’s dislike for Umino continues from 2024 as he made his way to the ring. Umino wasted little time, interrupting his own entrance by assaulting Khan. As Umino was wresting Khan to the barricades, the former KOPW champ thrust his colorful opponent into said barricades. Khan continued his comeback, crumpling his opponent with a Gut-wrench Suplex into the corner of the ring. Umino fought back with an enzuigiri and a DDT, and Osaka maintained their disdain for him.

Umino nearly secured the win with underhook Death Rider. Just as his opponent invoked Jon Moxley, Khan called upon the style of former United Empire leader Will Ospreay with elbows to the back of Umino’s skull. Khan quelled Umino’s uprising with an STO and stamped it with an Elminator for the pinfall.

— Post-match: Khan grabbed out shaving equipment, ready to shear Umino’s head; Umino instead grabbed it and did it himself before collapsing onto the mat.

If NJPW is planning to make Umino’s journey going forward interesting, keep it on this route. Shaving his head, unmaking who he is, and taking inspiration from the hate of the crowd can make him a compelling character. Khan was in excellent form tonight.

Sanada defeated Taichi

Sanada wore a jacket to the ring, with shoulders padded with something reminiscent to Y2K-era stereos. He cut Taichi’s music short. Taichi, his entrance gear still on, toppled his former ally with a Big Boot. He teased using Sanada’s acoustic guitar against him, but thought better of it, perhaps because music and its instruments are sacred to him. Taichi battered Sanada on the outside, tossing him to the barricade and cracking him with whatever weapon he could find. Taka Michinoku appealed to his better senses; Taichi began to play fair. Bullet Club intercepted Michinoku as Sanada dropped Taichi with a Magic Screw.

Taichi kept his stiff offense, despite a glimpse of comeback potential. Sanada avoided Taichi’s best-laid plans by grabbing the referee to distract Taichi and capitalizing with a Shining Wizard. Taichi dropped Sanada with an enzuigiri. Sanada opted for another referee distraction, and resorted to feigning a suffered low-blow. Taichi’s anger grew, leading him to lose focus with repeated referee spots, a low-blow, and a Dead Fall for the win.

— Post-match: Bullet Club War Dogs ganged up on the prone Taichi, saved at the last moment by a returning Yuya Uemura.

I missed Uemura after his injury in the G1 Climax. He’s one of NJPW’s promising new stars and heading up against Bullet Club should quickly put him back in the ranks. I geeked out. As for the match itself, it was excellently paced. Taichi clutched hope yet fell to his own emotions. The referee and low-blow spots were a bit much, but it’s hard to be mad at their chemistry and the post-match angle.

Ichiban Sweet Boys (Robbie Eagles & Kosei Fujita) (c) defeated Chaos (Rocky Romero & YOH) for the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship

Eagles & Fujita isolated YOH in the early goings, but Romero helped turn the tide. Romero neutralized Eagles with a Suicida, leaving Fujita to take to the skies; Chaos caught him and double-suplexed him on the outside. Fujita leveraged Romero’s presence in the ring to send him into YOH’s superkick but failed; they succeeded on Eagles. YOH set a top rope-perched Romero up for a finisher on Fujita, but Eagles interjected with a Hurricanrana.

Romero avoided Chaos’s combined effort on him with a Double-Hurricanrana but suffered a Sweet Buster for his troubles. Eagles assisted Fujita with a flying enzuigiri and German suplex combination, followed by an Abandon Hope to at last retain the titles.

— Post-match: Taiji Ishimori challlenged for the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship with the aid of Robbie X in the future.

Fine match. Romero’s a great ring general and everyone followed his lead to a satisfying degree. Eagles and Fujita continue to make for appropriate champions, with Chaos being another notch in their belt-er, belts. Nothing game-changing, but an entertaining watch.

Konosuke Takeshita (c) defeated Boltin Oleg for the NEVER Openweight Championship

A standoff begat this championship bout. Takeshita’s merciless approach whittled at the normally indomitable Oleg. Takeshita plummeted Oleg with a top-rope suplex that shook the whole ring; the challenger could only scream in agony. Miraculously, Oleg made a spirited comeback, going so far as to throw Takeshita across the ring as though he were a plush teddy bear. A Fireman’s Carry earned Oleg a breather, leading to another standoff, this time with exchanged lariats. Takeshita reeled from a Boltin Shake, nearly falling to a Boltin Bomb.

Takeshita’s trusty Blue Thunderbomb couldn’t put the Kazakh wrestler away. Trading elbows, Oleg quickly gained the upper-hand, folding Takeshita like a bad hand at poker whilst maintaining wrist control. Desperately, Takeshita threw all the deadliest strikes and finishers he could muster. Even a sleeper couldn’t extinguish his flame. A Raging Fire made that flame mere embers, as Takeshita got the pinfall victory.

— Post-match: Ryohei Oiwa greeted Takeshita after the latter shook hands with Oleg. A NEVER Openweight Championship match is set for the future.

Narratively, this was executed perfectly. Oleg is normally presented as an unstoppable force. Putting him through the woes of Takeshita only to have him come back with a more prepared strategy made this a test of wills that nearly destroyed Takeshita’s reign. Fortunately for his hometown, AEW’s International Champion walked away victorious. Another match of the night.

Los Ingobernables de Japon (Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi) defeated The Young Bucks (Matthew Jackson & Nicholas Jackson) (c) for the IWGP Tag Team Championship

Following an uneasy handshake, Takahashi used a suprise attack on the Young Bucks and Naito followed his lead. Slowing down the otherwise high-speed action, Nicholas almost had control had Naito not moved out of the way to hurt Matthew. Takahashi, filled with gremlin energy, ran like a locomotive train and toppling both of the Jackson brothers. After a Superkick Party, Nicholas nearly pinned Naito. An EVP Trigger failed to connect to the LIJ leader a first time, but a second one hit.

Thwarting a Meltzer Driver, Naito and Takahashi went full throttle, with the former nailing a series of Destinos on the brothers. One final Destino in particular put away Nicholas for the victory.

If only there were more defenses that the Young Bucks could have had. Their performances as the EVPs in this tour of New Japan Pro Wrestling were refreshing. Their quips and their style provided something special in the company. However, tag team gold suits Takahashi and Naito at this point. Sharing the ring with their bodies in their state gives them time to put in just enough effort without punishing them.

Yota Tsuji (c) vs. Gabe Kidd for the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship ended in a draw

Tsuji, sporting shorts this time, locked up with Kidd, but the challenger was several steps ahead. Brawling on the outside, Kidd once again remained in control against the barricade and onto the padding outside. The pair took turns echoing chops throughout the arena and again with thudding elbows. One chop from Tsuji was so loud, so unpleasant, that it caused a veign to be visible in Kidd’s head.

The wear-and-tear of this exchange saw Tsuji collapse after superkicking Kidd to the ground. A Boston Crab hold tortured Kidd, but did not deter him from crawling for a rope break. Fighting his way from the top rope, Kidd dropped Tsuji and struck him with a hard lariat. Tsuji quelled this momentum by flipping Kidd through the air before falling himself. A frenetic exchange saw Tsuji lariat Kidd to the mat, succeeded by a powerbomb. Kidd aimed for an exposed running knee, but Tsuji met it with a Gene Blaster. Kidd could not stand back up in time, Tsuji couldn’t stay on his.

— Post-match: Kidd and Tsuji checked on one another before headbutting each other. Kidd slapped Tsuji to the mat. House of Torture emerged, attacking Tsuji and then Kidd. EVIL and Dick Togo made a surprise appearance, seemingly to defend Tsuji and Kidd before striking both. EVIL then declared that the House of Torture would no longer be affiliated with War Dogs moving forward. As EVIL saw it, House of Torture kicked the War Dogs out of the Bullet Club. Clark Connors, who was on commentary, met the same fate as Kidd and Tsuji.

The match itself was gruesome. The red welts on Tsuji and Kidd’s chests are exactly the thrill I look for in intense NJPW matches. Regarding the post-match, as much as I’m not a fan of House of Torture, this separation was sorely needed. If making a more combined effort in cohesing the two wasn’t in the cards, then bringing both groups apart helps for the Bullet Club’s overall identity.

Main event

Hirooki Goto defeated Zack Sabre Jr. (c) for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship

Sabre and Goto locked up, with the latter switching to his power-based style. Though his arm had been targeted by the champion, Goto found the strength to down him with an Ushigoroshi. Throwing Sabre about the ring, Goto maintained a pace built on hope and determination. Twisting and contorting Goto’s arm, the Brit sought a Sabre Driver which bore no fruit until later when the challenger couldn’t drop him.

Osaka, having given Goto a warm reception upon his entrance, made their voices heard in favor of the hopeful challenger. A Reverse-GTR failed and gave way to another Sabre Driver and an arm hold. Hope turned to dreadful agony for Goto as Sabre wrenched his arms back further and further until a rope break saved him. In Sabre’s clutches, Goto nearly succumbed to a sleeper hold and a Penalty Kick before rising with a lariat and a GTW which couldn’t stop the champion.

Rageful, Sabre sent a flurry of slaps across Goto’s face, but he would not falter. A series of headbutts and a lariat led a chorus of inspired Osaka cheers. They would be further elated with each subsequent GTR. One final GTR gave Goto the three seconds needed for the pinfall victory.

— Backstage promo/commentary notes: Goto thanked the fans and his family and announced that he would like to give Hiroshi Tanahashi a title match at the NJPW 53rd Anniversary Event. Yuji Nagata approached Goto, wanting to be the next challenger after Tanahashi. Walker Stewart announced that Chris Charlton would be back from suspension in March.

Consider me moved. I felt no way or another going into this match during the build, but the press conference, the entrance, and the performance changed ALL of that. I could feel Goto’s late father beckoning him to fight through each hold to survive. Goto employing the styles of Katsuyori Shibata and Kazuchika Okada as YOSHI-HASHI cheered him on made this something special. If I wasn’t already having enough trouble keeping my eyes dry, seeing the catharsis on his face helps me even less. This deserved the main event spot.

Overall thoughts

Overall, The New Beginning in Osaka was a blast. The city itself became as important a factor as the wrestlers themselves. I’d recommend watching Moloney vs Takagi, Taichi vs Sanada, Takeshita vs Oleg, Kidd vs Tsuji, and especially the main event. The stories flowed beautifully and the action matched it as needed. An almost perfect card, the future is looking exciting. Yuya Uemura is back, Ryohei Oiwa takes on Konosuke Takeshita soon, younger stars are becoming bigger deals, and Hirooki Goto has finished the story. This is a new beginning I hope doesn’t end anytime soon.

NJPW Strong Style Evolved live results: Mercedes Mone vs. Hazuki

An NJPW Strong Women’s title defense by Mercedes Mone headlines tonight’s Strong Style Evolved.

Mone puts her title on the line against Hazuki in the main event after the challenger won a qualifying match on last month’s NJPW show in the United States. Mone has held the title since Forbidden Door this past June.

Two more title bouts are set for the show.

Gabe Kidd will defend the NJPW Strong title against Ryohei Oiwa on the show. Grizzled Young Veterans put their Strong Tag Team titles on the line against Jorel Nelson and Royce Isaacs of the West Coast Wrecking Crew.

AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita teams with Jack Perry against Shingo Takagi and Yota Tsuji of Los Ingobernables de Japon in another of tonight’s featured bouts.

Tonight’s show streams at no extra cost on NJPW World for subscribers to the company’s streaming service (monthly subscription fee applies), or as a pay-per-view on Triller. Our coverage begins at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time with the pre-show.

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Pre-show

Zane Jay defeated Matt Vandagriff in a Strong Survivor Match

Vandagriff’s advantage in size put Jay through woe within the early goings of the match. Throughout the match, he confidently threw and slammed his opponent around as though there were nothing behind his eyes.

The tide turned when Jay slammed Vandagriff on his back with a spiteful spurt of energy. Attempts by Vandagriff would momentarily stun Jay, but it would have to take more than that to quell his spirit. After a Flying Crossbody on the outside and a Frog Splash on the inside, Vandagriff nearly got the win, with successive brutish throws meeting the same fate. Jay’s pride refused to keep him down, and he dragged Vandagriff with every iota of willpower to defeat his bully of a foe with a Boston Crab. Vandagriff tapped, marking a huge victory for Jay.

— Post-match: Vandagrifff apprehensively shook hands with Jay as he left the ring.

After witnessing the long-running story of Vandagriff’s dominance, each distanced neared by Jay grew increasingly compelling. Vandagriff would make for an interesting Bullet Club member, but I admit, I’d love to see Zane Jay as a regular in Japan.

Main Show

Mina Shirakawa defeated Johnnie Robbie

Though flashy and explosive, Shirakawa found her mettle tested by Robbie, who was determined to prove herself to her fellow Californians in Long Beach. A Figure-Four Leglock from Shirakawa entrenched Robbie through multiple layers of agony; though she reached for the rope, the sting was still there.

Attempting a Glamorous Driver, Shirakawa’s finisher was thwarted by successive Inside Cradles. However, Shirakawa squared her opponent away with a now successful Glamorous Driver onto the mat. Robbie only looked at the lights as Shirakawa gained the pinfall.

Robbie made a fan of me. That plucky babyface hoping to make a name for themselves in the midst of a more popular and flashy competitor just sucks me in.

West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) defeated Grizzled Young Veterans (c) (James Drake & Zack Gibson) for the Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship

Isaacs immediately found himself in the throes of pain by the GYV, fresh off his Bloodsport Match the previous night with Josh Barnett. Nelson fared better, but Gibson and Drake were equally as callous to him. WCWC found a stride in momentum, however, as they stayed close in proximity with each other to maintain stamina.

As GYV wrenched their opponents into gnarly holds, Isaacs found strength beyond strength to lift Drake and plummet him on top of Gibson, breaking his hold on Nelson. With Gibson restrained on the outside by Nelson, Drake hopelessly grabbed for his partners and the ropes, hoping either to be the savior. With a roll-up pinfall, Isaacs wins the gold for him and Nelson.

Post-match: Rocky Romero came out to congratulate WCWC, and even challenged the pair at Battle in the Valley against him and YOH. WCWC replied in short by attacking Romero.

I love a hometown victory, but I expected Grizzled Young Veterans to take the win here. Perhaps that’s why this match kept me hooked. From their past wars with Dirty Work and epic matches against Motor City Machine Guns and Tanahashi & Ishii earlier in the year, their hard-fought journey paid off. Great match.

TJP defeated Clark Connors, Kosei Fujita, and Kushida

Fujita kept TJP in his paces after the bell while Connors and Kushida fought on the outside. Once finished with the Intergalactic Jet Setter, Connors contended with TJP and Fujita. Kushida and Fujita found their composures, felling their American foes while dealing with one another. An all out frenzy transpired, with each player employing their signature offense with utmost aesthetic and excitement.

Fujita wrenched back Connors, pulling as far as he could go, but almost as if to taunt him, TJP pinned Kushida just inches away. His eyes were firmly locked onto the soon disheartened Fujita as the referee counted to three. TJP stood victorious over his three competitors.

Four wrestlers of the same size but different styles morphed this match into an exciting bit of high-flying mayhem. This is one of those matches you turn your brain off for and let the players direct your attention the whole way through.

Hechicero defeated Lio Rush

Rush, more familiar with the wind soaring past his ears, met a formidable talent in Hechicero, he who controls the ground. Dodging Rush’s swift strikes as though he were the world’s quickest soothsayer, Hechicero’s strategy of letting the speedy wrestler tire himself out paid dividends. Rush, thinking outside of the box, changed his tempo and trajectory.

Stunting Rush after a flasy attempt on the ring apron, Hechicero tied, wrangled, and cranked his body on the ropes. Not to force a submission, but to leverage that pain later. Perhaps the thing that saved Rush the most in this match were his repeated bursts of adrenaline, one such that stunned Hechicero with a high-velocity flurry of strikes. Hechicero, tenacious as ever, trounced Rush with a sound El Camisa for the pinfall.

Rush is always an exciting wrestler who moves at unreal speeds, so seeing him clash with an artist like Hechicero was a treat. Hechicero’s offense clashed so well that the pair seemed as though they’ve been facing off against each other for decades. Spectacular stuff.

United Empire (Jakob Austin Young & Templario) defeated Los Ingobernables de Japon (Hiromu Takahashi & Titán)

Takahashi’s frenetic energy saw Young and Temlario laid out on the floor, gaining his team the early advantage. Young, back in the ring, suffered at the hands of Titán, but managed to gain some momentum after a dropkick to a later-legal Takahashi. Outside, Templario and Titán’s acrobatic maneuvers left each other in a heap. In the ring, Templario dropped Titán with a Fireman’s Carry + Double-knee Gut Buster as Takahashi dispatched Young into the guardrails.

Takahashi, returning to the harassment of Young on the outside, failed to see Titán being folly for Templario’s comeback. After a really cool breakdancing move, Templario rose to plunge his fellow luchadore to the mat with a Powerbomb + Brainbuster combo. Takahashi could only helplessly grasp for his teammate as the referee counted to three.

LIJ are a cool group, but seeing the less prominent members of United Empire get a moment to shine put a smile on my face. Templario moves with the best of his lucha peers. To see him bring out his best while Young served as a sponge for pain made their comebacks progressivley gripping with each swing in momentum throughout the match.

Gabe Kidd (c) defeated Ryohei Oiwa for the Strong Openweight Championship

Two beefcakes collided in this title match. Kidd’s heelish tendencies contrasted with the unwavering spirit of Oiwa, as seen through the latter’s perseverence through ungodly chest slaps echoing throughout the venue. Following a series of stiff strikes, Kidd flung himself with a lariat to Oiwa, who countered with a suplex as his chest’s chop-splattered blotch glimmered pinkly under the lights.

A Schoolboy Roll-up from Oiwa teetered him close to a pinfall, but Kidd evaded it with a last-second kickout only to be rewarded by a Doctor Bomb. Before he could make any further progression, Clark Connors snuck his way to the ring, battering Oiwa with a chari. Kosei Fujita made the save for Oiwa, brawling with his opponent from earlier as they headed backstage. Despite a passionate lariat, Oiwa’s hopes were dashed by a Piledriver, punctuated by a Madman Bomb for the pinfall.

— Post-match: Kidd grabbed the microphone and besmirched the name of Kenny Omega, Daniel Bryan, and All Elite Wrestling in general before kindly departing.

Meaty men, slapping meat. Oiwa and Kidd remind me of the classic clips of Kenta Kobashi and Stan Hansen brawling it out in 90’s AJPW. For those that salivate over the signature brutal style of NJPW, I say go out of your way to watch. Kidd and Oiwa have fantastic chemistry that I hope continues in NJPW for years to come. But moreover, this match brings us closer to seeing if Kidd makes his name immortalized when competing with the impending Best Bout Machine come January.

TMDK (Bad Dude Tito, Shane Haste and Zack Sabre Jr.) defeated Dirty Work (Fred Rosser and Tom Lawlor) and Shota Umino

Tokyo Dome challengers Umino and Sabre fought to a standstill, opting to save more for later. Lawlor and Tito instead locked up, with urgent matwork ensuing. Rosser took it from there, giving Tito a run for his money. Haste’s grappling and agility served as a foil to such power. TMDK proceeded to isolate Rosser from his teammates, with Haste picking at him vulturously. One spiritual shot of adrenaline later, and he quieted the Australian’s advances with a Gut Check. Umino challenged Tito’s strength, only for Haste to once again return to sweet agony.

With Dirty Work cleaned up on the outside, each TMDK member in the match took turns hurling their bodies at Umino at the turnbuckle. Wringing the arms of Umino behind his back, victory was within Sabre’s grasp. He would’ve clutched it had Dirty Work not struggled their way to break the hold. A Tornado-DDT by Umino granted him a comeback, serving to reunite Lawlor and Tito once more. Recovering from a botched slip-and-fall on the top rope, Lawlor flew from the top onto Tito. While Rosser and Umino were concerned with Haste and Sabre on the outside, Tito plopped Lawlor soundly on the mat for a pinfall.

Post-match: Sabre taunted Umino, goading him to strike him, as though not to play nice. Umino didn’t oblige this attempt, which seemed to be a mixture of disdain and tough love.

A fantastic preview to the Wrestle Kingdom match, this also complimented the efforts that Dirty Work has put in for the U.S. based events. To see them involved with the current IWGP World Heavyweight Champion in a match was rewarding as a fan. Tito and Rosser were fantastic together, and I want more. Admittedly, my hype died down a little after Lawlor’s scary botch, but he and Tito won me back over.

Jack Perry and Konosuke Takeshita defeated Los Ingobernables de Japon (Shingo Takagi and Yota Tsuji)

The dastardly pairing of Perry and Takeshita made them a menace for Tsuji and Takagi, the otherwise powerful members of Los Ingobernables de Japon. Their alliance proved contemptuous, however, as Takeshita tagged himself back into the match with a chop to Perry’s back.

Perry continued to be subject to torment inside the ring, but his partner Takeshita thrived under the powerhouse of Takagi, going so far as to land a Blue Thunderbomb. Tsuji chased Perry around inside the ring, nearly finishing him off, until the Scapegoat careened Tsuji nearly into the referee. Landing a low-blow to Tsuji, Perry ended the match with a Running Knee and a pinfall over LIJ.

— Post-match: Hiromu Takahashi made the save to Takagi and Tsuji, only for The Young Bucks to make a surprise appearance, making their claim to regain their place as the top tag team in NJPW at Wrestle Dynasty.

A fan of AEW, I’ll say that this was one of my least favorite matches on the card. Not that it was bad, but it didn’t have the oomph that earlier matches had. Perry being a target for punishment only to be a winning factor later on was humorous, and Takagi’s stand against Takeshita was incredible. Other than that, this is saved by Takagi, Tsuji, and Takeshita’s ringwork and the spectacle of what’s to come with AEW and NJPW’s eventual clash in Tokyo.

Main event

Mercedes Mone (c) defeated Hazuki for the Strong Women’s Championship

With all the glitz and bombast at her disposal combined with the love of the crowd, Hazuki’s initial momentum was stunted the more Mone found an opening. However, Hazuki’s determination brought her opening chances at victory, especially as she threw herself with multiple tope maneuvers. A desparate Mone clutched a Statement Maker onto Hazuki, who countered with one of her own.

Repeatedly throughout the match, Mone tried slapping and trading forearms with Hazuki, but each time. Mone tried to borrow from her hero Eddie Guerrero with a Frog Splash to no avail and to her hearbreak. Hazuki held onto a Statement Maker for a prolonged period, nearly causing Mone to tap (and I could’ve sworn she almost did). Mone flung Hazuki with a Sunset Flip, then blasted her with a Meteora, which bore no fruit. A Diving Codebreaker by Hazuki brought her a deep pin, broken miliseconds away from the third count.

A series of consecutive Backstabbers and a Mone Maker nearly eked out a victory for her, but at the last second, Hazuki rasied her leg to the bottom rope in just enough time to break the pin and the one after. Red-faced and distraught beyond human capacity, Mone readied another Money Maker only to be countered with a roll-up. Money tried it once more, and finally grabbed victory with a pinfall.

— Post-match: Mone beckoned anyone willing to step up to her to face her at Wrestle Dynasty. Mina Shirakawa answered that call, throwing her proverbial hat in the ring.

I honestly thought Hechicero vs Lio Rush would’ve been my match of the night, but this blew every other match out of the water, and most of the matches were already incredible. This match simultaneously reminded me of Hazuki’s battle with Hana Kimura at the 2019 5 Star GP and Mercedes Mone’s wars with Bayley at the early NXT Takeover events. I’m so glad to see Mercedes back in top-form after her Kris Statlander match at Full Gear and to have everyone see why Hazuki is as special as she is.

NJPW Road to Destruction live results: NEVER Six-Man title match

Hiroshi Tanahashi, Oleg Boltin, and Toru Yano will put the NEVER Six-Man titles on the line in today’s NJPW Road to Destruction main event.

Tanahashi, Boltin, and Yano defend the trios belts against Bullet Club’s House of Torture represented by EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi, and Dick Togo. It’s the first defense of the second reign for the Tanahashi/Boltin/Yano trio.

Today’s show is also unique for the 20-man Ranbo set for the show, as well as the return of MMA legend Kazushi Sakuraba to an NJPW ring in the opening contest.

The 55-year-old Sakuraba is a Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Famer, and last appeared in an NJPW ring on a joint show with NOAH in 2022. Before that, the legend had not competed for NJPW since 2016.

Today’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji, Shingo Takagi & Hiromu Takahashi vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Callum Newman & Jakob Austin Young
  • Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI vs. David Finlay, Gabe Kidd & Gedo
  • 20-man Ranbo
  • Kazushi Sakuraba & Toru Yano vs. Masatora Yasuda & Daiki Nagai

Today’s show begins at 3 a.m. Eastern time.

**********

Kazushi Sakuraba & Toru Yano defeated Masatora Yasuda & Daiki Nagai

Sakuraba tapped Yasuda out with a Sakuraba Lock for the win.

Yasuda and Nagai are still growing talents; seeing them working with a comedic approach already flexes their experience as they progress.

Shota Umino won the 20-man Ranbo after last eliminating Zack Sabre Jr.

Participants: Katsuya Murashima, Shoma Kato, Yuma24, Tomoaki Honma, Tiger Mask, Kosei Fujita, Jado, Ryusuke Taguchi, Francesco Akira, TAKA Michinoku, Tomoya, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Takashi Iizuka, Taichi, Yoshinobu Kanemaru, SHO, DOUKI, SANADA, Shota Umino, and Zack Sabre Jr.

Umino sent Sabre Jr. out of the ring with a dropkick.

Ranbo matches are entertaining, as evidenced by Iizuka’s wild presence, like when he attacked one of the Japanese commentators.

David Finlay, Gabe Kidd, & Gedo defeated Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto, & YOSHI-HASHI

The War Dogs won after Kidd finished off Goto with a Piledriver.

In the match, Kidd used his rage at Ishii and his team for causing Jake Lee’s injury on September 11. I find that an interesting yet unwitting wrinkle to Kidd and Ishii’s fiery, blossoming feud.

Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Callum Newman, HENARE, & Jakob Austin Young defeated Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji, BUSHI, Shingo Takagi, & Hiromu Takahashi

HENARE won with a Full-Nelson lock to BUSHI.

I’m more sold than before on the Destruction main event between Khan and Naito, and I was already sold on it. As I await Zack Sabre Jr.’s upcoming match against the IWGP World Heavyweight Champion, the story in this Road To tour leaves a question of who will survive Destruction. Bonus: I got more fallout from the Cobb/Tsuji and HENARE/Takahashi matches – a welcome retread.

Hiroshi Tanahashi, Toru Yano, and Oleg Boltin (c) defeated EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi, and Dick Togo for the NEVER Six-Man Championship

Enduring the typical House of Torture fare, Tanahashi stood against EVIL until he was overcome. Boltin came to his rescue, leveling the playing field for Yano to get some handy offense – he didn’t, as he protected the Yoshinoya turnbuckle from their onslaught. EVIL spent most of the time picking him apart before handing him to Takahashi.

Boltin, back in the ring, battered Takahashi and rattled him around like a ragdoll, taking advantage of his strength and weight. He attempted a Brainbuster, only for Takahashi to transition it into a DDT. Tanahashi returned with a Sling Blade to EVIL before Togo swung a turnbuckle to The Ace’s back.

Yano, back in the ring, suffered Whiskey in the Eye by an interfering Yoshinobu Kanemaru, followed by a Magic Killer, and a Pedigree via Togo. But through the combined efforts of the champs, Boltin weakened Togo for Tanahashi’s High Fly Flow and Yano’s Oni Koroshi. It was Yano’s devastating thud that guaranteed the 3-count to retain the belts.

Not mind-blowing by any means, but this has been the most I’ve enjoyed House of Torture since maybe its inception. Despite his veteran status, I’m still astounded at how Yano can summon the ability to make his comedy add to the drama of the matches. Tanahashi thrives in this environment at this point in his career and I’m thankful I can see The Ace in a good light in his matches once more. I’ve said enough at how much potential there is in Boltin’s physique and how he uses it. Keep these belts on these men.

NJPW Road to Destruction live results: IWGP Junior title match

DOUKI will make his first defense of the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship on today’s NJPW Road to Destruction event.

DOUKI defends the Junior title against former three-time champion Taiji Ishimori in today’s main event. Ishimori has won all four of the previous singles meetings between the two.

Today’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji, Hiromu Takahashi, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, HENARE, Callum Newman & Jakob Austin Young
  • Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI vs. Jake Lee, Gabe Kidd & David Finlay
  • Shota Umino, Ryusuke Taguchi, Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru, SHO, Dick Togo, Yujiro Takahashi & EVIL
  • Kosei Fujita & Zack Sabre Jr. vs. SANADA & Taichi
  • TAKA Michinoku vs. Francesco Akira
  • Tiger Mask & Tomoaki Honma vs. Katsuya Murashima & Shoma Kato
  • Kickoff match: Masatora Yasuda vs. Daiki Nagai

The kickoff show begins at 5 a.m. Eastern time with Young Lions Masatora Yasuda and Daiki Nagai squaring off. The two have gone to seven draws in their singles matches together.

**********

Kickoff

Masatora Yasuda vs Daiki Nagai ended in a time-limit draw.

After a hotly contested battle, Yasuda held a vicious and dramatic Boston Crab until Nagai nearly passed out. The 10-minute time limit elapsed, however, ending the match in a draw.

The NJPW locker room emptied to the arena for the late Kuniaki Kobayashi’s 10-Bell Memorial Ceremony

Main Show

Tiger Mask & Tomoaki Honma defeated Katsuya Murashima & Shoma Kato

Tiger Mask pinned Kato after a Tiger Suplex.

Francesco Akira defeated TAKA Michinoku

Akira matched the veteran in Michinoku with a Michinoku Driver II for the win.

Michinoku and Akira felt like two generations speaking to each other, like a passing of the baton. Akira has a lot of upside, never failing to impress me in the ring.

SANADA & Taichi defeated Kosei Fujita & Zack Sabre Jr.

SANADA won via a Deadfall on Zack Sabre Jr.

It’s been a few years in New Japan Pro Wrestling without Suzuki-gun and Dangerous Tekkers, so this match felt bittersweet. As for the dejected SANADA after a fruitless G1 Climax, I’m curious to see where he goes after beating this year’s finalist.

Yoshinobu Kanemaru, SHO, Dick Togo, Yujiro Takahashi & EVIL defeated Shota Umino, Ryusuke Taguchi, Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano & Hiroshi Tanahashi

EVIL and Togo dropped Taguchi with a Magic Killer for the win, despite a last-minute Tanahashi reaching out to help.

Boltin continues to shine. Taguchi locking in after a series of goofy antics never ceases to make me laugh, but he makes it work.

Tomohiro Ishii, Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI defeated Jake Lee, Gabe Kidd & David Finlay

Goto hit Kidd with a seemingly normal Brainbuster, leading to an awkward-looking victory over the dazed Brit.

Post-match – Ishii and Bishamon brawled with Finlay and Kidd. Lee was absent.

This was a pretty fine match until the pin. Goto looked confused at Kidd being too late to kick out, yet turned out to be fine. Lee wasn’t seen after hurting his knee.

Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji (as Mascara Kantan Su Tomato), Hiromu Takahashi, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI defeated Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, HENARE, Callum Newman & Jakob Austin Young

Following a Tornado DDT and Pluma Blanca combination, Naito tapped out the United Empire’s Young for the win.

Despite the drama of Naito and HENARE preparing to defend their IWGP World Heavyweight and NEVER Openweight titles respectively at Destruction in Kobe, I chuckled as Tsuji found the time to don a mask as Mascara Kantan Su Tomato. This was an action-packed 8-man tag that continued to elevate Young.

Main Event

DOUKI (c) defeated Taiji Ishimori for the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship

Initially evenly matched, Ishimori quickly got ahead of DOUKI following a moonsault off the second rope and slamming his arm into the ring post, trapped in a chair. Avoiding a 20-count at 15, DOUKI fared no better; Ishimori’s dirty tactics refused to let DOUKI on his feet for long.

DOUKI found the strength to unleash a snap hurricanrana, a tope, a DDT, and a suplex in succession to Ishimori, finally gaining him some control. Throughout the match, he spiked Ishimori on his head to loud effect. DOUKI countered Ishimori’s Bloody Cross into a gnarly DDT that nearly had the win. DOUKI retained his championship after transitioning a Bone Lock into a Suplex De La Luna.

Post-match – Celebrations were cut short for DOUKI, as Yoshinobu Kanemaru attacked him, demanding a match. Just 5 Guys came to his rescue among the blue and silver confetti, helping him limp backstage.

Matches like these solidify my love for the Junior Heavyweight division in NJPW. DOUKI’s year has been strong, but I can’t state enough on how satisfying a tear that Ishimori has been on since returning to in-ring action at 2023’s Royal Quest. He’s been so motivated and I can’t wait for the 2025 that he has.

NJPW Road to Destruction live results: HENARE vs. Hiromu NEVER title match

NJPW’s Road to Destruction tour continues today with a NEVER Openweight title bout headlining.

In the main event, NEVER Champion HENARE puts his title on the line against Hiromu Takahashi. Although the NEVER division is supposed to be without weight limits, this is a rare heavyweight vs. junior heavyweight title matchup.

Today’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Callum Newman & Francesco Akira
  • DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku vs. Taiji Ishimori & Gedo
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi, Toru Yano, Oleg Boltin & Tiger Mask vs. EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi, Dick Togo & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Tomoaki Honma & Tomohiro Ishii vs. Jake Lee & Gabe Kidd
  • Jado & Shota Umino vs. SHO & Ren Narita
  • Katsuya Murashima & Hiroyoshi Tenzan vs. Kosei Fujita & Zack Sabre Jr.
  • Shoma Kato vs. Jakob Austin Young
  • Kickoff: Ryusuke Taguchi & Yuji Nagata vs Fighter N & Fighter Y (characters from the Go! Go! Loser Ranger stage show)

The kickoff show begins at 5 a.m. Eastern time.

**********

Kickoff

Ryusuke Taguchi & Yuji Nagata defeated Fighter N & Fighter Y (characters from the Go! Go! Loser Ranger stage show)

Taguchi won the match via an ankle lock on Fighter Y, while Nagata held Fighter N in a headlock as Y tapped out.

Main Show

Jakob Austin Young defeated Shoma Kato

Following their trios match against each other on the previous night (September 8), Young and Kato traded blows, with Kato eventually gaining momentum. Escaping a Boston Crab, Young followed with elbows and knees until finally landing a Jakob’s Ladder to get the pin.

I was nearly, nearly convinced that Kato might escape with the win, but Young’s comeback put that to rest. Kato really sank in that Boston Crab.

Kosei Fujita & Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Katsuya Murashima & Hiroyoshi Tenzan

Sabre Jr. and Tenzan started this match, but Fujita fought to impose his longer tenure against the Young Lion in Murashima. Tenzan’s power at first seemed to overwhelm Sabre Jr. later on, but the G1 Finalist’s ingenuity and maneuvering kept him above water.

Using his TMDK training, Fujita ensnared Murashima in an arm bar and added his other arm for increased effect the further the Young Lion inched toward a rope break. Murashima submitted with both arms trapped.

Murashima came off excellently here. It’s a credit to how far along Fujita’s come to sell the future importance of Murashima.

SHO & Ren Narita defeated Jado & Shota Umino

Before the match even started, SHO and Narita darted off to stop Umino and Jado ahead of the bell. Undeterred, Umino remained evenly matched with Narita. Sensing Jado to be the weaker link in the team, Narita and SHO targeted the former Bullet Club member, weakening his knee.

Narita and Umino continued their rugged affair, still unable to gain control over the other. Jado had much better luck in applying his experience in picking apart SHO until Narita distracted him with a wrench. SHO took advantage of this by swinging a board to the back of the veteran’s leg and pinning him for the win.

With the focus on Narita and Umino’s rivalry, I feel that despite my misgivings about House of Torture, this character trajectory for Narita makes for a compelling story in the greater scope of the Reiwa Three Musketeers.

Jake Lee & Gabe Kidd defeated Tomoaki Honma & Tomohiro Ishii

In a rematch from last night, Ishii and Lee started without hesitation, exchanging blows until Kidd overwhelmed the Stone Pitbull. Honma had no time for this, as he cornered and battered the verbal Kidd. Ishii made the save when Lee and Kidd held Honma in a precarious predicament on the ropes, leading to Honma nearly pinning Kidd after a falling headbutt. Overcoming Kidd and Lee, he rolled up the former for a pin, to no avail.

After another save by Ishii, the Stone Pitbull brawled with Lee on the outside. Kidd won the match with a running knee on Honma.

Post-match – Ishii continued to brawl with Lee and Kidd but was choked unconscious.

I came for Ishii and Kidd locking up, and I got what I wanted. I admit that Lee and Honma work together well.

EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi, Dick Togo & Yoshinobu Kanemaru defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi, Toru Yano, Oleg Boltin & Tiger Mask

Boltin remained strong in the early goings, but thanks to the pack mentality, he wass but mere prey to the House of Torture. Tanahashi evened the odds, laying out EVIL. Tagging in Tiger Mask and Yano, they and Boltin charged EVIL in a combined effort before House of Torture broke it up.

Tiger Mask for a time handled Kanemaru with ease before interference by Togo and Takahashi saw him on his back. Togo dropped a Senton onto Tiger Mask while Kanemaru trapped him in a Figure Four Leglock, making him tap.

These matches continue to leave Boltin being a standout while working with established veterans. The rest of this was a typical House of Torture match, heavy with interference.

DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku defeated Taiji Ishimori & Gedo

Ishimori and DOUKI were off to a hot start, with a DOUKI Chokey involved, but no headway. Gedo and Michinoku engaged in a series of pins, with repeated kickouts. Gedo submitted to a face lock by Michinoku while DOUKI maintained a DOUKI Chokey even after the bell rang when the match was over.

A blazing sprint that knew what it needed to be. Fun and concise.

Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Callum Newman & Francesco Akira defeated Tetsuya Naito, Yota Tsuji, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Callum Newman & Francesco Akira

Immediately, everyone splintered off. Tsuji and Cobb were left to resume the action from last night’s NJPW World TV Championship match, while Naito bullied Khan on the outside and mocked Khan with his signature pose. Newman and Akira delivered a speedy offense to wear down Takagi, leading to all-out mayhem in the ring.

Left alone, Khan and the legal BUSHI contested each other in the ring. With an Eliminator, Khan secured the victory for the United Empire, while staring at Naito, who watched from the outside.

This sets the stage perfectly for the physical threat Khan is to Naito’s reign. Newman and Akira’s speed I found to be exhilarating and I was satisfied to see Cobb and Tsuji run back their previous match, showing that it’s far from over between them.

MAIN EVENT

HENARE defeated Hiromu Takahashi for the NEVER Openweight Championship

HENARE may be a pure heavyweight, but Takahashi fought as though he were more than a junior heavyweight. He used a Falcon Arrow for a near-count but was unsuccessful. HENARE struggled with Takahashi’s velocity, nearly slamming him had it not been for a swift and sly transition into a DDT.

In a heated exchange, Takahashi traded his chops with HENARE’s kicks, both to the chest; HENARE dropped to his knees after a brutal chop before standing tall again. Seemingly submitting, Takahashi dropped to his knees, accepting another kick to the chest and another to the face for a pin which he kicked out of, and another which he kicked out of again. Eventually, he finds the strength to catch HENARE and give him a powerbomb.

HENARE countered with lariats and kicks but still struggled to keep Takahashi down. Even with a TOA Bottom, Takahashi couldn’t be pinned, despite a rigorous sleeper hold moments prior. Not even a Rampage could end the match for the champion. Takahashi wasn’t without his troubles, as his Time Bombs lacked the explosive impact needed to put HENARE away. At last, with a Streets of Rage, HENARE retained his title, soundly defeating Takahashi definitively.

Post-match – HENARE put his hand on Takahashi’s chest as a sign of respect. As Tetsuya Naito and Shingo Takagi checked on their prone comrade, the latter was challenged by the champion. HENARE then professed the importance of the championship to him and his culture.

Chris Charlton put it best, “this is what the NEVER Openweight Championship should represent.” A thrilling ride from bell to bell, Takahashi’s unpredictability made for an interesting matchup for HENARE’s overwhelming vigor. This mixup made for an intense viewing, one that makes a fan’s heartbeat echo like an angry drum. If you want a standout on this Road To Destruction tour, this is one to make time for.

NJPW Road to Destruction live results: Cobb vs. Tsuji TV title match

The Road to Destruction continues today with an NJPW World TV title bout headlining.

NJPW World TV Champion Jeff Cobb puts his title on the line in the main event against Yota Tsuji. Tsuji has won both of the prior singles meetings between the competitors.

The NJPW World TV title matches are contested under 15-minute time limits, making this one of the shorter NJPW main events in recent memory.

Today’s undercard:

  • Hiromu Takahashi & Shingo Takagi vs. HENARE & Francesco Akira
  • Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI vs. Zack Sabre Jr. & Kosei Fujita
  • DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku vs. Taiji Ishimori & Gedo
  • Ryusuke Taguchi, Oleg Boltin Toru Yano & Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. SHO, Dick Togo, Yujiro Takahashi & EVIL
  • Tomoaki Honma & Tomohiro Ishii vs. Jake Lee & Gabe Kidd
  • Jado & Shota Umino vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Ren Narita
  • Shoma Kato, Katsuya Murashima & Tiger Mask vs. Jakob Austin Young, Callum Newman & Great-O-Khan
  • Kickoff: Masatora Yasuda vs. Daiki Nagai

Today’s kickoff show begins at 5 a.m. Eastern time.

**********

Daiki Nagai defeated Masatora Yasuda

Yasuda largely stayed in control in the earlier half of the match; he targeted Nagai’s knee for a large portion, nearly trapping him in the middle of the ring.

Nagai powered out of this hold and let out a burst of offense before dragging Yasuda for a nicely tight Boston Crab for the win.

Yasuda came off as exuberant and charismatic, with future star energy. The underdog performance of Nagai made his end of the angle compelling.

Jakob Austin Young, Callum Newman & Great-O-Khan defeated Shoma Kato, Katsuya Murashima & Tiger Mask

Tiger Mask led his two Young Lion partners in an early beatdown of Khan, but he overcame them swiftly with Murashima getting most of his licks in. Newman and Young would do the same to Tiger Mask, but his expertise and experience countered them.

With brief assistance from Newman, Young tested himself against Kato, with the former getting a win by a Shiranui to get the 3-count.

Post-match, Young and Tiger Mask got into a brawl.

With commentary putting over Young’s fresh entry into the United Empire, he performed excellently. His athleticism coupled with his cocky attitude instantly won me over. Murashima and Kato also show a lot of promise.

Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Ren Narita defeated Jado & Shota Umino

There wasn’t a moment for Umino to breathe, as Kanemaru and Narita bullied him the second the bell rang. Kanemaru then targeted Jado’s leg for an extended, extended period. Umino made the hot tag, leading to a hot clash against Narita.

Beginning to overcome Narita, Jado had him through the ropes, not knowing that he was already on his two feet. Kanemaru snuck in to spray whiskey in his eyes, which Narita followed up with a swing of a board to the leg. Locked into submission, Jado tapped to Narita.

Typical House of Torture fare, but once again, the future is brightly on display with the high points being Uminio and Narita.

Jake Lee & Gabe Kidd defeated Tomoaki Honma & Tomohiro Ishii

Catching the veterans by surprise, the War Dogs Kidd and Lee separated from each other to isolate and break their opponents. Eventually, Ishii decided he’d had quite enough of Kidd’s bullying, fighting back with forearms and punches. Sustaining the crowd’s energy, Honma overcame Lee once they were tagged in. Lee attempted Big Danger to put away Honma, but Ishii broke it up.

Putting Ishii away, Kidd gave just enough time for Lee to steal Ishii’s Vertical Drop Brainbuster for the win.

Post-match – Kidd and Lee assaulted Ishii and celebrated in the ring. Ishii got up not too long after, understandably irate.

Ishii can’t catch a break. From his indestructible neck targeted by Chis Jericho and his Learning Tree on AEW to being sent through the rail, he’s had it rough. More of him vs Kidd, please.

SHO, Dick Togo, Yujiro Takahashi, & EVIL defeated Ryusuke Taguchi, Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano, & Hiroshi Tanahashi

House of Torture started this match in typical fashion, dispatching Boltin and Tanahashi before humorously taking out Taguchi. Alone, Yano ducked and weaved only to find House of Torture beating up a Yoshinoya turnbuckle. Valiantly, he threw himself onto his inanimate object friend. Tanahashi and Boltin took it from there.

Boltin’s resilience and strength, while not enough to overcome the odds of House of Torture, found just enough to tag in Taguchi. The Funky Machine fared quite well against SHO, defiantly swinging the Yoshinoya turnbuckle and making life difficult for SHO before Takahashi violated him with a stick in his rear. SHO took advantage of this by rolling Taguchi up for the win.

The veterans on the babyface side shone brilliantly. with Tanahashi in particular reminding me of All-Might from the anime My Hero Academia. The more I see of Boltin, the more I become a fan of his.

Taiji Ishimori & Gedo defeated DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku

Ishimori and DOUKI started off the match but Michinoku and Gedo drove most of the first half of this match. Mostly using eye-poking techniques, Gedo nearly had the match won had it not been for DOUKI distracting the referee.

Ishimori targeted the shoulder of DOUKI, but it was Michinoku who gave the Bone Soldier a run for his money each time he was tagged back in. Despite his best efforts, Michinoku tapped out to Ishimori’s Bone Lock, leading to victory for Bullet Club.

Inconsequential, but fun tag match. At his age and career longevity, I’m impressed that Michonoku moves the way how he does.

Zack Sabre Jr. & Kosei Fujita defeated Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI

This clash of Los Ingobernables de Japon and TMDK saw Naito and Sabre Jr. giving a hint of their upcoming match in October, but then it was left to Fujita to survive Naito and BUSHI. With Sabre Jr. back in the ring, the crowd was driven into a frenzy with every subsequent trick.

Keeping up his momentum, Sabre Jr. maintained his holds and submissions on BUSHI, with Fujita making the save on an intercepting Naito. BUSHI had no other option but to tap to Sabre Jr.’s bow and arrow hold.

Fujita’s come a long way since joining TMDK at Wrestle Kingdom 17. The sounds of his strikes on BUSHI and Naito echoed loudly through the arena. Sabre Jr. solidified my wish for him to be the IWGP World Champion. Beloved by the crowd, well-crafted in his style, and uniquely captivating on the microphone, there’s a lot to be gained from pushing him.

Hiromu Takahashi & Shingo Takagi defeated HENARE & Francesco Akira

A test of endurance begat this state of affairs, between the United Empire’s HENARE and Los Ingobernables de Japon’s Takahashi. Together, he and Takagi reduced HENARE’s defense. Akira took over from there, delivering an impactful basement dropkick on Takahashi.

Confidently standing his ground, Takagi initially endured the speed and precision of Akira, but not for long. Akira survived many devastating moves of Takagi, with edge-of-your-seat nearfalls, but ultimately Takagi got the win after an explosive Made in Japan.

The second half of the match felt more like a singles match between Takagi and Akira, but I don’t think that’s a bad thing. The smaller, more nimble of the United Empire withstanding the awesome power of LIJ’s Dragon added levels of intensity across their varied styles.

Jeff Cobb (c) vs Yota Tsuji for the NJPW World TV Championship ended in a time-limit draw

The normally indomitable Jeff Cobb quickly found himself under the immense might of Tsuji, but mustered the will to persevere. Knowing that Tsuji may very well have his number, Cobb’s strategy and desperation to retain was palpable. Survive or win. He reminded Tsuji that he only needs to do one or the other to keep his title.

Cobb’s overbearing force gave little room for Tsuji to breathe, but the spirit within the challenger raged on. Withstanding each other’s offense, they traded finishers and transitions, heightening the drama to almost deafening levels. The champion retained with a Tour of the Islands onto Tsuji being too late with the 15-minute time limit expiring. Cobb’s efforts to get a win over Tsuji bore no fruit, but Tsuji failed to gain the title.

Post-match – Cobb had no time to celebrate as Narita attacked him soon after, challenging for a match in the future.

I was on the edge of my seat with this match. Every move mattered and the 15-minute time limit added to the rush of adrenaline that came from this match’s intensity. This looked like it would be Tsuji’s moment, but instead, this sets the stage for so much more. The use of the time-limit draw was used effectively here, and I want more.

NJPW Capital Collision live results: Mercedes Mone vs. Momo Watanabe

Mercedes Mone will make the first defense of her first reign as NJPW Strong Women’s Champion in tonight’s Capital Collision main event.

Mone puts the title on the line against Momo Watanabe in her first defense since June’s Forbidden Door.

NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Gabe Kidd defends his title against Lio Rush while Hiromu Takahashi faces Mustafa Ali in a rematch from April’s Windy City Riot.

Strong Openweight Tag Team Champions TMDK (Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls) defend against CMLL’s Hechicero & Virus, and IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Tetsuya Naito faces United Empire’s TJP in a non-title match.

G1 Climax 34 winner Zack Sabre Jr. will be in singles action tonight against Titan of CMLL.

Dirty Work (Fred Rosser & Tom Lawlor) battle Lawlor’s former allies in the West Coast Wrecking Crew while in trios action, YOSHI-HASHI, Rocky Romero & Kevin Knight take on Bullet Club War Dogs.

A match to decide the next challengers for Strong Tag titles opens the main card with Hiroshi Tanahashi & Tomohiro Ishii vs. Grizzled Young Veterans vs. TMDK’s Robbie Eagles & Bad Dude Tito.

Matt Vandagriff vs. Allan Breeze, plus Mina Shirakawa & HANAKO vs. Trish Adora & Viva Van are set for the kickoff show at 6:30 PM EST.

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Pre-Show

Matt Vandagriff defeated Allan Breeze

Capital Collision’s pre-show kicked off with both men on equal footing. Vandagriff soon got the upper hand, working the back and chest of Breeze, followed by a knee strike into the post. Vandagriff looked to almost have the match won following a spot at the turnbuckle, picking at Breeze like a vulture, failing a pin attempt after a thunderous cannonball. Breeze powered out of the offense, gaining spectacular momentum. Vandagriff countered this with his strikes, punctuated by a Bloody Sunday.

An excellent pre-show opener. Breeze has babyface spirit, but Vandagriff comes off as a future star. In-ring and character in him shows promise. I wouldn’t be opposed to seeing him as a future member of Bullet Club’s War Dogs.

Empress Nexus V (Mina Shirakawa & Hanako) defeated Viva Van & Trish Adora

Adora and Hanako began this match with utter speed and tenacity, but soon tagged Van and Shirakawa who proceeded with comedic antics. Adora soon tagged herself in; she and Van separated Shirakawa. Hanako put an end to it with Shirakawa isolating Van from Adora.

Hanako and Shirakawa continued picking Van apart, with Hanako halting Adora from making the assist as Shirakawa tapped Van out with a figure four leglock.

The dynamics of this match were cleverly planned, with Adora and Hanako serving excellently as the heavies while Shirakawa and Van’s personalities shone. The crowd was into Empress Nexus Venus. I love how Shirakawa knows how to work with American crowds.

Main Card

Tomohiro Ishii & Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated TMDK (Bad Dude Tito & Robbie Eagles) and Grizzled Young Veterans (James Drake & Zack Gibson) in a #1 Contenders Match for the Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship

TMDK took Ishii and Tanahashi out in the early goings, leaving them to clash with GYV, until Tanahashi tagged himself in. The Ace stood his ground defiantly, but Eagles tagged himself in, but soon found himself in dire straits with Gibson and then Drake. Ishii then tagged himself in, bulldozing everyone until he and Tito stood toe-to-toe with The Stone Pitbull standing tall. Ishii then proceeded to singlehandedly overcome GYV’s attempts.

Tito tagged himself back in and toppled GYV for another standoff with an understandably frustrated and energetic Ishii. Tanahashi tagged himself in to whittle down Tito, but GYV swiftly ended his aspirations. Eagles soared into the ring, evening the odds with his brisk pace. Each team took turns with spot after spot until Tanahashi and Ishii isolated Tito, with Tanahashi securing a pin after a High-Fly Flow.

Phenomenal opener. Tanahashi’s been working better in tag matches and Ishii is evergreen in the ring. Though I rooted for GYV, I wasn’t mad at the result of this match. Two hungry younger talents against equally hungry, grizzled old veterans started the main card off right.

Rocky Romero, Kevin Knight, & Yoshi-Hashi defeated Bullet Club War Dogs (David Finlay, Clark Connors, and Drilla Maloney) in a Six-Man Tag Match

The War Dogs opened the match by barking at the audience, as is their tradition. Knight and Connors collided first, leading to Yoshi-Hashi and Romero cutting Connors off from his War Dogs. Connors fought out, tagging in Maloney, who followed up with a stiff exchange with Romero. Romero responded in kind, winding up for a simple eye poke. Winding up the crowd, Romero and Maloney sped around the ring, only for Maloney to knock Knight and Yoshi-Hashi out of the ring while Connors handled Romero.

Romero’s bad luck continued with The War Dogs biting at him with shots and kicks in their corner of the ring. After a hot tag, Yoshi-Hashi blasted The War Dogs with a barrage of offense. He then clashed against Finlay before Maloney and Knight tagged themselves in. With superb athleticism, Knight held Maloney and Connors at bay. Despite his agility, The War Dogs wore him down, leading to a frenzied Romero to get his revenge. Dispatching Romero with a Drilla-Killa, Maloney nearly did the same to Knight with an attempted pin, who reversed it with a backslide.

Post-match, The War Dogs assaulted Knight, undoubtedly bitter after their loss.

A bit slower than the previous match, this match followed a methodical route. Kevin Knight was the spotlight with his incredible abilities; I’m astounded by him every time. That said, I’m still not impressed by Finlay, but his cohorts in Connors and Maloney are impressive.

Dirty Work (Fred Rosser & Tom Lawlor) defeated West Coast Wrecking Crew (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson) in a No DQ Tag Team Match

Dirty Work didn’t even let the match start before they assaulted West Coast Wrecking Crew from backstage to the ring. Once the dust settled, Rosser and Lawlor caused Nelson great suffering. Isaacs soon found the adrenaline to give WCWC a fighting chance by striking Lawlor. WCWC then followed this by clanging baking sheets on Rosser’s body.

Nelson delivered Lawlor into a Spinebuster onto some chairs before he and Isaacs catapulted him into the railing. Using steel chairs that Rosser introduced into the ring a short time prior, their opponents were left incapacitated. Plucking a white door from under the ring, WCWC sought to flip Rosser onto it, but he successfully fought back with renewed vigor. Another door was brought into the ring, where it leaned on a ring post. Placing a trash can on Lawlor, WCWC played tennis with him using the chairs, echoing loudly.

After a headshot by a chair, Rosser seemed doomed, but Lawlor came to his rescue, hoping to send Nelson through the door bridged on the outside. Thanks to a tug of war, Lawlor and Nelson fell through the outside door as Rosser sent Isaacs through the inside door for the win.

This was, as some would put it, some dirty work. Plunder matches are fun and the comradery between Lawlor and Rosser created a thick sense of drama. Isaacs and Nelson put up a great fight and continue to be an underrated part of NJPW STRONG’s shows.

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Titán

Fresh off his appearance in the Casino Gauntlet Match at AEW’s All In, Sabre was warmly welcomed by the Washington DC crowd. Displaying his technical proficiency, Sabre found himself countered by the nimble Titán, as they rolled through the ring with Titán gaining advantage with his speed. The normally strategic Sabre’s difficulty in nailing his opponent was brief, however, as he grounded the acrobatic Titán, stretching and bending his legs – if he can’t outpace him, he could weaken his limbs. Tauntingly kicking Titán, Sabre met his karma after Titán sent him out of the ring and brought him back in to bend and stretch Sabre, who parried with a similar maneuver. Grappling for control, neither man gained from this exchange, instead softening each other into exhaustion.

Refueling each other through the adrenaline of chest shots, Titán found the most energy, breaking down Sabre, each wrestler trading hold for hold. Try as he might with his agility, Titán found one last reversal by Sabre stretched him in a submission hold until he tapped.

My match of the night so far. Sabre’s technical prowess is unmatched in the current landscape of wrestling, perhaps aside from Hechicero. Titán’s speed and strength and Sabre’s intelligence told an excellent story, thrilling from start to finish. For their first time together, Sabre and Titán have great chemistry together.

Tetsuya Naito defeated TJP

Unwilling to wait for Naito to fully undress, TJP immediately attacked him on the top rope. Targeting Naito’s well-documented weak knees, TJP mockingly nearly ran up the 20-count as Naito struggled to get on his feet, much to the referee’s justified annoyance. Not letting Naito get even a chance of recovery, TJP rubs further salt into Naito’s wounds by stealing his Los Ingobernables de Japon T-shirt. Naito finally stands up, delivering DDTs and gaining back his shirt. He kept up this momentum until TJP regained his strength.

After attempting a Tornado DDT on Naito, TJP failed but spat red mist into the eyes of Naito for a series of unsuccessful pins and submissions. After a failed Destino, Naito managed to secure a victory with a Corriendo for the 3-count.

Whenever Naito wears a shirt to the ring, I can usually tell he won’t put in much effort, but this match betrayed that expectation. Naito fighting as an underdog against the reprehensible actions of TJP provided a captivating narrative, bolstered by Naito’s notoriously weak knees.

TMDK (Mikey Nicholls & Shane Haste) defeated Hechicero & Virus for the Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship

Nicholls hoped for a lockup between himself and Hechicero, but the Venus flytrap that is the lucha grappler snared him. Haste also struggled to keep up with Virus, infected with one hold after another. Sensing they couldn’t get a hold of their opponents by themselves, TMDK teamed up to trip Virus as they worked on his body, thus turning the tide of this match.

Hechicero, finally refreshed, gave Virus a moment of respite, nearly softening up TMDK in the process. This allowed Virus to place himself and Hechicero on equal footing with Haste and Nicholls. Luckily for TMDK, they got Hechicero out of the way long enough to drop a Tank Buster on Virus for a victorious pin to retain their championship.

Post-match, both teams shook hands. Tomohiro Ishii and Hiroshi Tanahashi entered the ring to greet their future opponents.

Leave it to TMDK to deliver some of my favorite matches of the night. With Nicholls and Haste having been a tag team for over a decade, contrasted to the multi-man tags that Hechicero and Virus are used to, had me on the edge of my seat. Though the CMLL wrestlers put up a valiant fight, the tag team chemistry inherent in TMDK secured their continued success.

Hiromu Takahashi defeated Mustafa Ali

Off to a frenetic start, Ali and Takahashi wrestled around the mat, rolling around until Ali attempted a pin. Arguing with Takahashi over the pin, the arrogant Ali mocked Takahashi with every bit of offense he could gain. After sending Ali into the rails, Takahashi teased introducing his plush cat Darryl into the match. Insulted by this, Ali threatened to harm the plush cat Darryl but decided not to.

Transitioning to the outside, Ali had Takahashi on the ropes but immediately was offset by a stiff arm clotheslining him. Flying too close to the Sun, Takahashi found his arm nearly broken on the rail with no chance to recover due to a flying Ali. Spending too much time bantering with the crowd, Ali suffered a suplex into the turnbuckle. Smartly taking advantage of Takahashi’s injured neck, Ali used a headlock, dropkick, and a Gory Special leading to a failed pin. After a 450 Splash, Takahashi got the win with a resounding Time Bomb. If Takahashi had lost, he would have had to publicly announce that Mustafa Ali was the best junior heavyweight wrestler in the world.

In the post-match angle, Ali and Takahashi agreed to have one more match, with Ali demanding it to be during next year, entering Ali into the BOSJ ahead of time.

This was a fine match that told a hilarious story. Ali’s tenacity mixed with Takahashi’s explosive unpredictability curated an atmosphere that was filled with comedy and intensity. That said, I’m content with waiting until the BOSJ rematch.

Gabe Kidd defeated “Blackheart” Lio Rush for the Strong Openweight Championship

While Rush entered the ring during a special performance, Kidd emerged with his standard fanfare; black-and-white robe and proudly carrying his title. Once the bell rang, all theatrics left the arena. Instantly, the match fell in favor of the speedy and seasoned Rush, darting like gunfire across the ring and overwhelming the Bullet Club’s foul-mouthed War Dog. Unforgiving and brutal in his approach, Kidd’s strength countered the quick pace of his challenger as he grew accustomed to Rush’s style and strategy.

Seemingly gaining some steam over Kidd, Rush attempted a Falcon Arrow to Kidd to no avail. Withstanding each flurry of offense Rush could muster, Kidd choked him out on the top rope and failed to slam him on the mat, reversed by an impromptu hurricanrana, followed promptly by a spear. Despite the shifting tides, neither can sustain momentum for long. After missing Rush with a chairshot and sustaining head damage because of it, Rush took advantage with a frog splash, though it bore no fruit.

Bleeding from the skull, Rush has withstood all that he could; even amid his immediate reaction time, his fighting spirit refused to give in. Ultimately, Kidd won thanks to a piledriver and a powerbomb for the 3-count to retain the Strong Openweight Championship.

I am astounded at the choreography on display in this match. Lio Rush’s superheroics contrasted nicely with the bullish attitude of Gabe Kidd. In my opinion, matches like this one indicate the high star power Kidd can reach if he sticks with NJPW long enough.

Mercedes Moné vs Momo Watanabe for the Strong Women’s Championship

The main event saw the crowd largely in favor of Moné, but Watanabe took joy out of riling them up. Noticing this, Moné played mind games of her own. Watanabe tried her best-underhanded tactics combined with Stardom’s brand of joshi wrestling, but Moné combined joshi wrestling with lucha libre to keep her off balance.

The H.A.T.E. member took advantage of a distracted referee to whack Moné in the ribs with her black metal bat, rejoicing in playing dirty. Overconfident and arrogant, Watanabe’s mockery, insults, and unfair direction only fueled Moné’s passion and anger. Kick after kick and elbow after elbow, the once-grinning Watanabe’s frustration and panic set in with every kick-out by Moné, who was equally exasperated at this point. A tug-of-war over Watanabe’s bat led to a hurt referee, which she poorly attempted to take advantage of, as Moné trapped her in a Statement Maker. Watanabe taps, and Moné retained her championship.

Post-match, Moné celebrated her defense reminiscing on the last time she stepped foot in a NJPW ring, and concluded with her signature CEO dance.

Moné preserved my confidence that her match with Britt Baker at AEW All In was an exception and that she’s still an incredible performer. Watanabe was no slouch either. I particularly enjoyed that Watanabe’s H.A.T.E. style against the multi-faceted inspirations that Moné draws from creates an interesting mixture. Matches like these keep me hungry for more Moné vs Stardom matches.

Overall, Capital Collision succeeded in its in-ring qualities. While the biggest overarching plot advancements are largely attributed to Hiroshi Tanahashi and Tomohiro Ishii’s upcoming challenge to TMDK and Mustafa Ali announcing his entry to 2025’s BOSJ, the appeal of the show focused on well-developed and thought out performances that told their own stories in the typical NJPW fashion.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 18 live results: Semifinals

Shingo Takagi vs. Zack Sabre Jr., and Yota Tsuji vs. David Finlay square off in today’s G1 semifinals.

Sabre vs. Shingo in today’s main event will decide the A Block representative in Sunday’s finals, with Sabre the top point scorer in the Block, and Shingo winning a playoff match to secure his place in the semis.

Finlay vs. Tsuji will decide B Block’s representative in Sunday’s finals, with Finlay the top scorer in the Block, and Tsuji winning a playoff match to earn his semifinals berth.

Today’s winners will meet Sunday for the right to challenge for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship at Wrestle Kingdom in January.

Today’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito, Hiromu Takahashi & BUSHI vs. Great-O-Khan, HENARE & Francesco Akira
  • Taichi, DOUKI & TAKA Michinoku vs. Taiji Ishimori, Clark Connors & Drilla Moloney
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi, Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano, Ryusuke Taguchi & Tiger Mask vs. EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi, Ren Narita, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Shota Umino, El Phantasmo & Jado vs. Konosuke Takeshita, Jeff Cobb & Callum Newman
  • Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma vs. Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee
  • YOSHI-HASHI & Shoma Kato vs. Robbie Eagles & Mikey Nicholls

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Undercard Results

Mikey Nicholls & Robbie Eagles defeated Shoma Kato & YOSHI-HASHI

Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee defeated Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma

Callum Newman, Jeff Cobb, & Konosuke Takeshita defeated El Phantasmo, Jado, & Shota Umino

EVIL, Ren Narita, SHO, Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Yujiro Takahashi defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi, Toru Yano, Oleg Boltin, Ryusuke Taguchi & Tiger Mask

Clark Connors, Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori defeated DOUKI, Taichi & TAKA Michinoku

Francesco Akira, Great-O-Khan & HENARE defeated BUSHI, Hiromu Takahashi & Tetsuya Naito

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G1 Playoff Results

B Block Final: Yota Tsuji defeated David Finlay

The B Block finally opened with a back-and-forth strike exchange that quickly worked its way into the corner. Tsuji won out by dropping Finlay with a shoulder tackle, knocking Finlay to the floor. Tsuji maintained his early lead, dropping Finlay before locking in body scissors to wear down Finlay.

Finlay dropped Tsuji against the turnbuckle to turn the match on its head. He followed up by whipping Tsuji into the corner and hitting a backbreaker to secure a strong lead. Finlay then turned to some work on the mat, until a Tsuji backbreaker sent him to the floor. When Tsuji tried to follow up with a tope, Finlay cut him off with a forearm to maintain his control.

On the floor, Finlay repeatedly drove Tsuji into the barricades. He then grabbed tables from under the ring that he attempted to drive Tsuji through with a powerbomb. Tsuji avoided the bomb and hit a tope in response to gain control for himself.

Back in the ring, Tsuji landed a rana, tackle, and lung blower to cement his control. Finlay fired back with a sliding strike to reset the match, but Tsuji landed a curb stomp to stay ahead. Tsuji then placed Finlay on the top rope, where a struggle ensued. After neither connected with a move, both worked their way to the apron, back to the tables set up by Finlay.

Tsuji attempted a curb stomp through the table but Finlay avoided the match-ender. Now, on the outside, Finlay grabbed Tsuji and threw him into the post, retaking control. Back in the ring, Finlay hit a pair of Irish Curse backbreakers, each scoring a nearfall.

Tsuji escaped the Dominator, leading to both men hitting the ropes. Tsuji then landed a devastating knee that nearly ended the match. Tsuji followed up by putting Finlay back on the top rope and hitting the Spanish fly for another nearfall. The falcon arrow and curb stomp followed Tsuji’s attempt to finish, leaving him in a strong position for his rope-assisted stomp.

Finlay avoided Malo Crash and hit Dominator to reverse the match’s momentum once again. Finlay then attempted to powerbomb Tsuji through the tables on the floor again, but Tsuji avoided disaster, leaving both men positioned on the apron. Tsuji managed to drop Finlay on the apron, sending him to the floor while keeping his G1 alive.

Tsuji hoisted Finlay up to drive him through the tables himself. After Finlay fought back, Tsuji threw him into the corner post. Finlay answered with a sudden burst of energy, which he used to powerbomb Finlay through one of the tables; the second one did not break. At this point, the referee began his count, which Tsuji beat at 19. Once Tsuji entered the ring, Finlay hit Oblivion for a two-count.

After Tsuji kicked out, a frustrated Finlay began to unload on Tusji with closed fist strikes, forcing the referee to intervene. Finlay hit a powerbomb for another nearfall. Finlay then landed a buckle bomb/powerbomb combination for another. Finlay, now more frustrated, hit two more buckle bombs but failed to hit the powerbomb on the follow-up. Instead, Tsuji reversed into a quick pin.

Once Finlay kicked out of the pin attempt, Tsuji hit him with a Gene Blaster; Finlay barely kicked out. Tsuji followed up with a curb stomp and Malo Crash for another nearfall. Tsuji then set up for another Gene Blaster but Finlay reversed into a pin. When Tsuji kicked out, Finlay reversed into Overkill. Tsuji blocked the finish, leading to back-and-forth strikes. Tsuji hit Finlay with a headbutt and a deadbolt suplex to earn enough distance from Finlay to set up his finish. He then hit the Gene Blaster and pinned Finlay to win the match.

Tsuji has won the B Block and advanced to the finals of the G1 Climax.

A Block Final: Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Shingo Takagi

Tonight’s main event opened with some light grappling from ZSJ. As the pace increased with a bit of striking, Shingo tried to hold his own, but ZSJ was able to establish control nonetheless.

A neck crank from Shingo opened the door for some Shingo offense. He followed up by dropping ZSJ on his neck before whipping him into the barricades on the floor. Shingo then drove ZSJ into the apron before stomping him on the floor, establishing solid control.

ZSJ landed a head screw and a dropkick to turn the match around after spending a long time on the back foot. He followed up with targeted offense on the mat, drawing in strikes from Shingo. Shingo’s strikes were powerful enough to rock ZSJ, leading to a DDT and a suplex.

Shingo maintained his lead with a powerful offense, landing suplexes and potent strikes to keep ahead of ZSJ. ZSJ fired back by pulling Shingo to the mat and driving his knee into the mat. ZSJ followed up with a targeted attack on the knee, keeping Shingo grounded.

Shingo eventually landed a lariat to end ZSJ’s brutal attack. He followed up with a superplex which rolled through into a magic screw. ZSJ tried to answer with his signature groundwork, but Shingo responded with a simple choke to maintain his lead. Shingo then powered through and landed Made in Japan.

When Shingo attempted his finish, ZSJ avoided the end. Eventually, Shingo landed a partial pumping bomber, leading into a quick trade of pins. ZSJ was able to take advantage of this exchange by hitting a Zack Driver, but he was too exhausted to follow up.

ZSJ began to kick at a grounded Shingo. After landing a PK, ZSJ scored a nearfall. Shingo tried to respond with another hold, but ZSJ returned to attacking the leg, forcing Shingo into the ropes.

Shingo tried striking down ZSJ in the middle of the ring, but ZSJ pulled him to the mat and stomped his arm in response. After Shingo escaped ZSJ’s followup submission attempt, Shingo hit a pumping bomber, but he failed to cover ZSJ.

Shingo tried for his finish, but ZSJ transitioned into a choke. Shingo broke ZSJ’s choke by dropping him on his back, but ZSJ transitioned into a triangle immediately afterward. Shingo powered out and landed Last of the Dragon but ZSJ kicked out.

Shingo, growing desperate, began to club ZSJ with clotheslines in the middle of the ring. ZSJ responded with strikes of his own. ZSJ won out by hitting a Zack Driver, but Shingo kicked out. ZSJ then locked in a knee bar in the middle of the ring, which after an extended struggle, forced Shingo to tap out.

ZSJ has won the A Block and is in the finals of G1 Climax.

The finals are set—Yota Tsuji vs. Zack Sabre Jr.

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

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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.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 16 live results: Final B Block matches

The G1 Climax 34 playoffs will be set following today’s final night of B Block action.

The top three B Block finishers will be entered into the playoff bracket, with the top B Block finisher earning a bye to the semifinals.

In the main event, Jeff Cobb (10 points) takes on Yota Tsuji (8 points). In the semi-main, Ren Narita (10 points) faces Konosuke Takeshita (8 points). David Finlay (10 points) takes on El Phantasmo (6 points), and Hirooki Goto (8 points) face HENARE (6 points) in the other tournament matches tonight.

HENARE, ELP, Oleg Boltin, and the injured Yuya Uemura are mathematically eliminated, while the other six competitors all have a shot at the playoffs as B Block enters its final night.

Today’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI vs. Great-O-Khan, Francesco Akira & Callum Newman
  • EVIL & Dick Togo vs. Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma
  • SANADA & TAKA Michinoku vs. Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee
  • Oleg Boltin & Toru Yano vs. Katsuya Murashima & Shoma Kato

**********

Undercard Results

Boltin Oleg & Toru Yano defeated Katsuya Murashima & Shoma Kato

Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee defeated SANADA & TAKA Michinoku

Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma defeated EVIL & Dick Togo

Great-O-Khan, Francesco Akira & Callum Newman defeated Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi & BUSHI

**********

B Block Results

HENARE defeated Hirooki Goto

There were so many feed issues with this match that I wouldn’t recommend it for that reason alone. What I did see of the match wasn’t particullarly great.

After a typical opening exchange, Goto fled to the floor, where HENARE slammed him into the barricade. Back in the ring, Goto answered HENARE’s early lead with a lariat. Goto followed up with a series of power moves, ending with an ushigoroshi.

A strike battle in the middle of the ring fired up both men. Goto won out in the end by landing a lariat. When Goto tried to follow up, HENARE reversed into the Bezerker bomb for a sudden nearfall. A knee strike in the corner and punt set up the Streets of Rage, but Goto reversed into a choke.

Goto landed a punt of his own followed by GTW for a nearfall. HENARE bounced back with a sudden Rampage, scoring a nearfall of his own. At this point, the NJPW world feed cut (a problem that has been occurring all night). When the feed returned, HENARE was pinning Goto to win the match.

David Finlay defeated El Phantasmo

This match opened with back-and-forth strikes that spilled to the floor. ELP landed a plancha on the outside, gaining an early lead, which he used to whip Finlay through the barricades. ELP then carried Finlay to the crowd, only for Finlay to drive him into the seating.

Back in the ring, Finlay took his time picking apart ELP, paying special attention to the back. ELP fired back with a rana that sent Finlay to the floor and a tope that sent Finlay crashing into the barricade. The follow-up senton and moonsault scored ELP a nearfall, but a sudden backbreaker from Finlay put him right back in the driver’s seat.

Finlay hit Oblivion for a nearfall. After ELP survived, a short strike battle followed, but another backbreaker kept Finlay ahead. ELP tried to answer with a pair of quick pins and an Oblivion of his own. ELP hit Sudden Death for a two count which he followed with a CR2 attempt. Finlay powered through, landing a powerbomb.

ELP reversed the second attempt at a powerbomb into one of his own. He then hit a Thunderkiss 86, but Gedo pulled the referee to the floor before he could finish the count. This led to an altercation between the referee and Jado (yes, Jado), allowing Finlay to hit ELP with his shillelagh. Finlay then hit Overkill and pinned ELP to win the match and advance to the playoffs.

After the match, ELP assumed Jado was to blame for his loss. It seems he has lost another friend.

Konosuke Takeshita defeated Ren Narita

Takeshita’s performance in the match was really great, but God, it was a hard watch overall. The opening act was nothing, the HoT spots were too much, and Narita didn’t carry his weight, in my opinion.

The match began with House of Torture carrying Takeshita to the ring. They then offered Takeshita to Narita, allowing him to brutalize the leg as the opening bell sounded. He continued this attack on the floor, taking full advantage of the injury.

Takeshita tried to rally multiple times, landing suplexes and leg sweeps, but Narita brought him to the ground repeatedly with a single strike to the leg. Takeshita eventually hit a lariat from the corner to gain some footing. As he tried to follow up with a Blue Thunder Bomb, Narita reversed into a kneebar. Once the hold was dropped, Narita climbed to the top, where Takeshita cut him off and hit him with a superplex.

Takeshita landed a Bastard Driver as Narita tried to end his advance. This led to HoT hitting the ring, bumping the referee, and attacking Takeshita. After a prolonged attack, Takeshita began to fight back against HoT. He cleared the ring of Togo and EVIL just in time to eat a pair of guillotine knees from Narita. Takeshita managed to kick out of the pin attempt that followed.

Takeshita dropped Narita with a forearm to keep his G1 alive. Narita attempted to cut him off with some dirty offense, but Takeshita answered with a massive powerbomb. Narita answered with a kneebar, taking the match back to the mat. Takeshita powered through with a German and a world-class elbow strike to win the match.

With this win, Takeshita advances to the playoffs.

Yota Tsuji defeated Jeff Cobb

Cobb dropped Tsuji early with a shoulder check. This led into a strike exchange ending with a pounce from Cobb. Cobb followed up with deliberate offense to maintain his early control, slowly picking apart Tsuji.

Tsuji reversed a standing moonsault attempt, which opened the door to a quick rally. Tsuji landed a curb stomp for a two-count but Cobb answered with a hammer-and-sickle to put Tsuji back on the back foot. A quick back and forth followed, with both men trying for their finish, ending with a partial Gene Blaster spear for a Tsuji nearfall.

Cobb reversed a Tsuji curb stomp with a strike to the chest. The follow-up F5000 scored Cobb a nearfall. When Cobb tried for Tour of the Islands, Tsuji cut him off with a headbutt. Tsuji attempted Gene Blaster, but Cobb reversed into a lariat. As Cobb went for more, Tsuji tried for Gene Blaster again and landed it. Tsuji then went for Gene Blaster one more time, hit it again, and pinned Cobb to win the match.

Tsuji is set for the playoffs.

**********

G1 Playoffs

Opening Round

Shingo Takagi vs. Great-O-Khan | Yota Tsuji vs. Konosuke Takeshita

Semi-Finals

Zack Sabre Jr vs. Winner of Takagi/O-Khan | David Finlay vs. Winner of Tsuji/Takeshita

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 13 live results: Shingo vs. EVIL

Night 13 of the NJPW G1 Climax 34 tournament features A Block matches in Yokohama.

In the main event, Shingo Takagi (6 points) takes on EVIL (10 points) in a battle of former LIJ stablemates. It will be the sixth career singles meeting between the two, with Shingo currently holding a 3-2 edge.

In the semi-main, Zack Sabre Jr. (10 points) faces Gabe Kidd (6 points). It’s the fifth career singles meeting for Sabre & Kidd, with Sabre up 3-1 all-time.

Shota Umino (6 points) takes on Jake Lee (6 points) in another A Block battle on today’s show.

SANADA (8 points) vs. Great-O-Khan (6 points) is the second tournament bout of the show.

Tetsuya Naito (8 points) vs. Callum Newman (4 points) kicks off the tournament matches on today’s event.

Today’s undercard:

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

**********

Recommended Matches

SANADA vs. Great-O-Khan – This was a fun match built around limb work. While SANADA isn’t at his strongest selling an injury, O-Khan more than made up for that with a focused performance.

Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Gabe Kidd – This was a fantastic clash of styles. Kidd and ZSJ meshed well here, leading to a firey battle to determine the fate of A Block.

**********

Undercard Results

Boltin Oleg & Toru Yano defeated Shoma Kato & Katsuya Murashima

Konosuke Takeshita & HENARE defeated Ren Narita & Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Hirooki Goto & Tomoaki Honma defeated El Phantasmo & Jado

Jeff Cobb & Francesco Akira defeated David Finlay & Gedo

Yota Tsuji & BUSHI defeated Yuya Uemura & TAKA Michinoku

**********

A Block Results

Tetsuya Naito defeated Callum Newman

This match was what you’d expect from a Naito opener in 2024. It wasn’t horrible, but nothing I’d seek out.

Newman rushed Naito on his way to the ring. Naito tried to hold on outside the ring but a dropkick sent Naito into the barricade, leaving Newman with an early lead over the IWGP champion.

Once the match entered the ring and officially began, Naito dumped Newman to the floor and removed his entrance vestments. He then pulled Newman back in the ring and began to focus on Newman’s neck.

Naito tried for his super hurricanrana, but Newman flipped onto his butt instead of his head. Newman followed up with a pair of kicks to gain some momentum over Naito, but a spinebuster and more neck work ended his rally.

Newman reversed Destino into a knee strike, setting up an OsCutter attempt that he missed. Naito then tried for Destino again, hit it, but only scored a nearfall. To close, Naito hit another Destino and pinned Newman to win the match.

Naito’s victory leaves him with 10 points.

Great-O-Khan defeated SANADA

This match was surprisingly great. I was focused and played to O-Khan’s strengths quite well.

O-Khan opened the match by trying to catch SANADA off guard, initially by pushing him into the ropes before transitioning a choke into a spinning backbreaker of sorts.

After missing an early attempt at Eliminator, O-Khan ate a SANADA magic screw reversing the momentum of the match. SANADA then tried for the rounding body press but landed on his feet, jamming his knee on the landing. This opened the door for a targeted O-Khan attack, forcing SANADA to the floor.

On the outside, O-Khan continued to focus the leg with attacks against the barricade and on the floor. The assault continued in the ring, with O-Khan utilizing multiple holds to establish control in the ring.

A pair of dropkicks bought SANADA some separation. He followed up with a quick plancha to establish control, but his leg stopped him from taking full advantage. SANADA tried for Skull End, only for O-Khan to reverse into a leg hold. SANADA slipped free and hit a partial shining wizard that did more damage to SANADA than O-Khan.

O-Khan delivered a couple of kicks to the back of SANADA’s knee but SANADA managed to answer with a TKO. The follow-up shining wizard was blocked by a stiff right from O-Khan, resetting the match.

O-Khan tried to get the eliminator, but SANADA slipped free. The response O’Connor roll from SANADA was reversed into a sleeper. O-Khan transitioned into a German suplex, but SANADA landed on his feet, leaving him free to hit the shining wizard to the back of O-Khan. SANADA hit a second shining to set up Deadfall, but O-Khan reversed into a facebuster. O-Khan then landed eliminator and pinned SANADA to win the match.

O-Khan keeps his G1 alive with this win, advancing to 8 points.

Jake Lee defeated Shota Umino

Umino reversed the expectations by rushing Lee as the match began. He then pursued Lee to the floor, where he tried having a War Dogs-style fight with Lee. Lee, unsurprisingly, won out here, drove Umino into the barricade, and hit Umino with a chair.

Back in the ring, Lee used basic holds to maintain his control, slowly working over Umino. After an extended period on the back foot, Umino landed a dropkick to gain a bit of momentum. The followup apron DDT and fisherman suplex scored Umino a nearfall.

Lee caught Umino with a knee strike to the midsection to force Umino back to the mat. Lee then kicked Umino while he was down, leading to a count that nearly ended the match.

Umino caught a knee from Lee and dropped him with a forearm. Umino then teased Lee with strikes, leading to an exchange in the middle of the ring. Lee won out and hit a German, only for Umino to answer with Blaze Blade. Umino followed up with ignition, scoring a nearfall.

On his second attempt, Umino hit death rider for a false finish. He picked Lee for another, but Lee reversed into a back suplex. Lee then turned back to his wear-down offense long enough to hit a chokeslam and score a nearfall.

Umino cut off the FBS with a Blaze Blade. He followed up with a second Blaze Blade, but the death rider followup was stuffed. Lee then landed Face Break Shot and pinned Umino to win the match.

Lee’s win puts him at 8 points, while this loss mathematically eliminates Umino from playoff contention.

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Gabe Kidd

This match was fantastic. ZSJ was the perfect foil to Kidd’s ego.

Kidd tried chopping down ZSJ early. ZSJ responded by trying to take Kidd to the mat, but Kidd kept chopping. ZSJ fled to the floor, and Kidd continued to chop.

After dozens and dozens of chops, Kidd challenged ZSJ to sit in the ring and trade slaps. After landing a few back-and-forth palm strikes, Kidd bit ZSJ. This fired ZSJ up, leading to a rally.

After being on the receiving end of some high-impact ZSJ strikes, Kidd landed a lariat and a brainbuster. ZSJ responded with some targeted offense, focusing Kidd’s arm to maintain control. Kidd powered through with a suplex to reset the match.

After a short back and forth on the mat, Kidd hit ZSJ with Emerald Flowsion. He then attempted a moonsault, but ZSJ caught him in a triangle. Kidd fought out heavy strikes, but only after receiving heavy damage.

ZSJ tried for the Gotch piledriver, but Kidd stuffed it. When Kidd tried to answer, ZSJ caught him with the Zack Driver. A rebound lariat from Kidd led to another back-and-forth, ending with a choke from ZSJ. Kidd responded by saying he’d never tap out, flipping off the crowd, and passing out.

This win guarantees ZSJ’s spot in the playoffs with 12 points. Kidd has also been eliminated from contention.

Shingo Takagai defeated EVIL

This was horrible.

EVIL rushed Shingo as the match began, taking the match to the floor immediately. He drove Shingo into the barricade and attacked him with chairs to establish a strong lead.

After a long time on the back foot, Shingo hit a leg whip to gain some footing. Takagi’s rally was fairly uneventful, lasting until EVIL landed a lariat to retake control.

Shingo challenged EVIL with a quick strike exchange, ending with a sliding bomber that left Shingo ahead. When Shingo tried to follow up, EVIL bumped the referee and gouged EVIL’s eyes. Dick Togo then hit the ring, helping EVIL take control.

Hiromu ran to the ring to help Shingo but was overwhelmed without backup. A man dressed as BUSHI then appeared only to attack Shingo. Another BUSHI showed up, leading to the reveal that the original was Kaneamaru. From here, House of Torture destroyed Shingo with basically no pushback.

Shingo escaped Everything is Evil and landed a pumping bomber to buy some time. Shingo followed up with Made in Japan, but Dick Togo rang the bell early, breaking up the followup pin.

The referee was bumped again. Kanemaru then hit Shingo with his whiskey bottle, setting up the Magic Killer. Hiromu hit the ring again, causing enough distraction for Shingo to avoid Kanemaru’s whiskey misting. BUSHI then hit the ring and misted EVIL himself.

LIJ cleared the ring of HoT, leaving EVIL alone with Shingo. Shingo hit the pumping bomber. He then transitioned into Last of the Dragon and won the match.

Shingo now rests at 8 points, staying alive in the G1.

NJPW G1 Climax 34 night 12 live results: Goto vs. Finlay

A sold-out Korakuen Hall in Tokyo hosts B Block action on night 12 of the NJPW G1 Climax 34 tournament.

In the main event, Hirooki Goto (6 points) faces David Finlay (8 points). It will be the first career singles meeting between the two, as Goto looks to stay alive, while Finlay aims to keep his spot atop B Block.

In the semi-main, Yuya Uemura (6 points) faces Ren Narita (6 points). Uemura and Narita were part of the same class of Young Lions and thus have met 12 times previously in singles bouts, with Narita winning all 12.

HENARE (6 points) will take on Yota Tsuji (6 points) in another B Block bout on the show.

Konosuke Takeshita (6 points) faces El Phantasmo (4 points) in more B Block action.

In the night’s opening tournament bout, Jeff Cobb (8 points) will face Boltin Oleg (4 points) with Cobb trying to keep pace atop the B Block.

Tonight’s undercard:

  • Tetsuya Naito & Shingo Takagi vs. EVIL & Dick Togo
  • Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee
  • SANADA & TAKA Michinoku vs. Great-O-Khan & Callum Newman

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

**********

Recommended Matches

Jeff Cobb vs. Oleg Boltin – This was one of my favorite matches from the tournament. With every outing from Oleg, he looks better than the last.

Konosuke Takeshita vs. El PhantasmoThis was the most over-the-top match of the tournament. It was filled with intensity and passion. It’s easily one of the standout matches from this year’s G1.

Hirooki Goto vs. David Finlay – Again, if you’re looking for a traditional New Japan main event, it seems like Goto is your man this G1. He more than delivered tonight with a classic, emotional performance.

**********

Undercard Results

Great-O-Khan & Callum Newman defeated SANADA & TAKA Michinoku

Gabe Kidd & Jake Lee defeated Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma

Tetsuya Naito & Shingo Takagi defeated EVIL & Dick Togo

**********

B Block Results

Jeff Cobb defeated Oleg Boltin

This match was fantastic. What started as a wrestling showcase escalated into a war of convincing power moves and desperation.

This match opened with grappling, showing off both guy’s amateur backgrounds. Oleg won out in the initial scramble, forcing Cobb to the floor. After returning to the ring, Cobb caught Oleg with a strike instead of grappling, changing the flow of the match. Oleg responded by throwing Cobb across the ring and laying into Cobb with strikes of his own.

Cobb answered Oleg by kicking him on the mat to establish a lead. When Cobb attempted his standing moonsault, Oleg moved out of the way to reverse the momentum once more. Both men traded dropkicks to stay on even footing as the match continued to heat up.

Oleg eventually caught Cobb with a belly-to-belly suplex. This opened the door for a substantial sequence from Oleg, ending with a splash that scored him a nearfall. Oleg then tried to follow up with his gut wrench throw, but Cobb slipped free and did the move himself to retake the lead.

Cobb tried for a lariat, but Oleg caught him with another massive suplex. Oleg then hit Cobb with his gut wrench throw and a Boltin Bomb for a nearfall. With the end in sight, Oleg tried for his finish, but Cobb slipped free. This led to a back-and-forth for control, initially favoring Cobb.

Cobb tried for the Aloha Maker, but Cobb reversed into the Kamikaze. This scored another nearfall for Oleg. When Oleg tried for another, Cobb slipped free, leading to back-and-forth lariats. Cobb’s lariat won out in the end, leaving him free to hit Tour of the Islands and win the match.

With this win, Cobb leads B Block with 10 points. It also eliminates Oleg from playoff contention.

Konosuke Takeshita defeated El Phantasmo

This match was insane. It was filled to the brim with wild action all at an absurd pace. This was, without a doubt, the best performance I’ve ever seen from ELP and a fantastic outing from Takeshita.

ELP started this match with confidence, landing a dropkick before gesturing to the crowd. Takeshita fired back with the Takeshita line and some taunting of his own. ELP then tried a strike, but Takeshita ducked, leading to an awkward headbutt in the midsection, leaving both men flustered. Takeshita followed up with a DDT and an Irish whip to establish a substantial lead.

ELP ducked a knee from Takeshita, sending Takeshita to the floor. ELP followed up with a reckless suicide dive and a stunning moonsault into the floor seats to completely reverse the momentum of the match. ELP then took a moment to celebrate in the crowd before returning to the ring with a springboard senton and moonsault for a nearfall.

ELP tried for a crossbody, but Takeshita caught him, reversing into a dazzling blue thunder bomb. Takeshita then walked to the floor, where he grabbed a table. Takeshita then posted the table outside the ring. ELP faught back on the apron, preventing Takeshita from driving him through the table. They then fought to the top rope, where ELP landed an avalanche rana and a Thunderkiss 86 for a false finish.

Takeshita escaped the CR2 once, but ELP followed up with a quick sequence that allowed him to hit it on his second attempt; Takeshita kicked out. ELP then tried for sudden death, but Takeshita fell to avoid the finish. Takeshita rolled to the outside, where ELP caught him with a pump kick that left him lying on the table from earlier. ELP then climbed to the top rope, but a moment of hesitation allowed Takeshita to meet him on the apron. Takeshita then grabbed ELP and hit him with a disgusting bastard driver through the table.

A now bloody ELP barely beat the count. Takeshita tried following up with a finish, but ELP slipped free and hit the sudden death for another false finish. ELP then struggled to engage in a strike exchange before trying for another quick pin and hitting another superkick. As ELP tried for his finish, Takeshita reversed into the bastard driver position, but ELP rolled through into a pin attempt. Takeshita powered out, hitting ELP with a wheelbarrow German. Takeshita then took ELP’s head off with a lariat, only for ELP to kick out at one. Takeshita then hit the power drive knee, but ELP kicked out again. Finally, Takeshita hit Raging Fire to win the match.

This win leaves Takeshita with 8 points and eliminates ELP from contention in B Block.

Yota Tsuji defeated HENARE

This was another entertaining match. I’d say it was the weakest so far, but it was still more than solid.

This match opened with a relatively slow feeling-out process, with both men looking to prove their strength. HENARE established an early lead that he used to strike down Tsuji methodically. Tsuji answered HENARE with a sudden curb stomp that led into a tope that turned the match on its head.

Tsuji tried for a suplex that HENARE stuffed. HENARE then hit a suplex of his own. When he tried to follow up in the corner, Tsuji caught him with another curb stomp. Tsuji then followed up with a Samoan drop from the top rope.

A strike exchange allowed HENARE to fight his way back into the match. The Bezerker Bomb left HENARE in a seemingly strong position until Tsuji dropped Henare with a lariat to reverse momentum once again. Tsuji launched into a short rally that ended with a lariat from HENARE, resulting in a match reset.

A knee strike from Tsuji turned into an intense strike exchange. HENARE ended it with a rampage, scoring him a nearfall. HENARE then hit a knee of his own but couldn’t land Streets of Rage. The pair traded headbutts before HENARE ran at Tsuji. Tsuji then sprung up, hit HENARE with the Gene Blaster, and pinned HENARE to win the match. 

Tsuji’s win leaves him in solid position with 8 points.

Ren Narita defeated Yuya Uemura

This wasn’t great, but there are defintly worse House of Torture matches. Uemura’s personality and selling carried this match to a watchable level, so that’s something.

Narita jumped Uemura as the match began. He then drove Uemura’s legs into the ringpost and the floor before throwing him into the barricade to establish a strong lead. Back in the ring, Narita continued to target Uemura’s leg.

Uemura eventually fired up, chopping at Narita in the corner. Narita answered by gauging at Uemura’s eyes. When Uemura tried fighting back, he collapsed under the weight of his own body.

A sudden arm drag and dropkick from Uemura acted as a soft reset for Uemura, but the damage to his leg prevented Uemura from taking full advantage. He still managed to land a suplex before climbing to the top rope, where Kanemaru pushed him to the mat. Narita then locked in the knee bar, re-establishing a substantial lead.

Narita tried for the guillotine knee but missed. This allowed Uemura to knock him to the floor and hit a plancha, reversing the match’s momentum. He followed up with a crossbody for a nearfall and a German suplex for another.

Uemura tried for the deadbolt suplex, prompting Narita to bump the referee. Kanemaru missed the follow-up whiskey misting, and Uemura ejected him from the ring with a dropkick. Narita tried for a pushup bar shot, but Uemura blocked him and hit a dragon suplex to maintain his control.

Uemura tried for the deadbolt again. This led to Narita hitting the referee again and a low blow. Narita then landed the double cross and pinned Uemura to win the match.

Narita advances to 8 points.


Hirooki Goto defeated David Finlay

This was another classic Goto match, and a very good one at that.

In the opening back-and-forth, Goto dumped Finlay on the floor. He followed up with a tackle in the ring, but Finlay answered with a drop on the rope and a leg sweep to reverse momentum. The match then worked its way to the floor, where Finlay slammed Goto into the barricade and bit Goto’s forehead.

Back in the ring, Finlay began to pick apart Goto with a deliberate offense that lasted until Goto landed a massive lariat to reset the match. Goto followed up with a back suplex, but a lariat from Finlay sent both men back to the floor.

Finlay removed the padding on the outside and attempted a powerbomb on the exposed floor. Goto stuffed the move and dropped Finlay on the floor himself. Finlay answered by throwing Goto into the barricade again, maintaining a lead.

In the ring, Finlay continued to bite Goto, drawing the referee’s attention. This allowed Goto to fire back with a lariat and a ushigoroshi to retake the lead. A reverse GTR and a lariat set up the normal GTR, but Goto failed to connect. Instead, he landed a rope-assisted Shoto for a nearfall.

When Goto tried for the GTR again, Finlay slipped free and landed Oblivion. After Goto kicked out, Finlay hit a turnbuckle powerbomb and a traditional powerbomb for a nearfall. Finlay then tried for his finish, but Goto stuffed it, transitioning into Shouten Kai.

With Goto reversing the momentum, Gedo tried distracting the referee long enough for Finlay to use his shillelagh. Goto cut him off with a headbutt. Goto then threw the shillelagh to the floor and dropped Finlay with a GTW for a nearfall.

Goto attempted GTR, but Finlay reversed into Oblivion. On the decent, Goto caught the knee, blocking Finlay’s finish. Goto then dropped Finlay with a headbutt and hit Finlay with GTR to win the match.

Goto joins the crowded 8-point club, keeping his G1 very much alive.

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

**********

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.

**********

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

**********

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 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