NJPW Strong results: Tomohiro Ishii vs. Big Damo

Tonight saw the final installment from NJPW Strong’s Mutiny tapings in Hollywood, California.

KEITA and Yuya Uemura defeated Kevin Blackwood and Lucas Riley

Uemura and Blackwood started things off. Uemura was quick on the turnaround off the first lock-up, spinning out of Blackwood’s hands and taking him over with a flying mare—and got a pop for it. It’s a sequence many of us have seen ad nauseam, but this crowd was here for Uemura and whatever he did.

Moments later, the crowd heated up when he landed a shoulderblock, then a deep Steamboat-style arm drag. They went back and forth with Blackwood scoring a hip toss.

Blackwood returned Uemura’s attack with some kicks until KEITA and Riley were in next. Keita landed a big modified backbreaker which received a loud response from the crowd. Blackwood tagged in and landed a low dropkick to KEITA’s head while Riley held him upside down. Riley then hit KEITA with a low dropkick to the back of his head.

KEITA tried tagging out, but Blackwood pulled him back and landed a German suplex for two. KEITA came back with a jawbreaker and an upkick to tag Uemura back in. The crowd came alive for his return to the ring. He took Blackwood out with a flying forearm smash that’d make Tito Santana proud. This kid is on another level right now. Blackwood used a big roundhouse kick to counter, knocking Uemura down to the mat. 

KEITA and Uemura double-teamed Riley after KEITA threw Blackwood to the floor.

Before the finish, each wrestler seemed to have gotten a few of their last licks in. KEITA took out Blackwood. Riley took out KEITA. Then, finally, it was Uemura who would take out Riley, landing a Frankensteiner for the win. This was a good opener, but I need to mention that Uemura is special. Now might be the best time to hop on the bandwagon because he is hitting his stride in 2022.

Afterward, Blackwood and Riley cut a promo backstage where Riley explained that it was all right and that the second time would be better. When he attempted to confer with Blackwood, he was met with frustration and contempt. Blackwood blamed Riley for the loss. He then said that he was still 1–0 in NJPW and reiterated that it was Riley who had lost the match not himself. 

Bullet Club (El Phantasmo & Chris Bey) defeated Alex Zayne and Christopher Daniels

Zayne and Bey were in first and had a quick, creative exchange. Zayne did a standing corkscrew senton for two.

Daniels, at 51, is still looking real fit for his age. Bey would tag out to El Phantasmo. He would later jump off the ropes and rake Daniels’ back with his fingernails. Bey did a superfluous backrake spot of his own, too. They used a combo that saw ELP earn a two after landing on Daniels with a standing moonsault.

Daniels later used an STO, finally freeing himself up from Bey. He tagged out to a fresh Zayne who landed a few punches before a standing Harlem Hangover/Harlem sidekick combo for two. 

Bey and Daniels fell out of the ring. Zayne went for a shooting star press, but missed. He landed on his feet and rolled out of the way, but Phantasmo laid him out with the C4 for two. He then put Zayne out for good with his Sudden Impact superkick which Zayne took a Fatu-style spinning bump for.

Tomohiro Ishii defeated Big Damo

The story is that these two had a match seven years ago in RevPro out of the UK where Damo actually took the victory.

The two locked up, but Damo immediately shoved Ishii into the red corner. Both elbowed and shouldered the hell out of each other next. Damo had the advantage early on, though Ishii constantly barked at him to bring more of it on.

There were a few hecklers in the crowd who ganged up on Damo and told him to shave his back. Damo handled them well, at one point telling them off before giving the hecklers a full, proud view of his back, arms outstretched.

While this was a good moment, the ringside trolls at the show wouldn’t let up, regardless of what was going on which definitely hurt the vibe of the main event as a whole. Thankfully, much of it was inaudible on the recording. In a different setting, this match could have been much better.

Ishii tried to come back, whipping Damo into the corner and crashing into him with a corner lariat. Ishii unloaded his version of Genichiro Tenryu’s goo punch–chop sequence in the corner; jab, chop, jab chop. 

Damo countered the attack later with a running crossbody block and a jump kick to Ishii’s face after trading more blows. Tomohiro Ishii: perpetual underdog.

Ishii survived a fisherman’s superplex, standing up almost immediately after landing on the mat. He fired up which the crowd fed on. Damo missed another jump kick and Ishii then put the big man down with a vertical suplex. 

Damo hit a huge John Woo dropkick before using a slingshot senton into the ring. He pinned Ishii for two as the ten-minute announcement sounded over the house PA.

When Damo went for a Vader Bomb, Ishii moved out of the way and Damo crashed into the mat face down. He elbowed Ishii who responded with headbutts and a hard headbutt of his own. He took Damo out with a running lariat for two. Later, he scored a sliding lariat for two before putting Damo away for good with a big vertical drop brainbuster for the win in a little over 13 minutes. 

Final thoughts:

The main event was good, but would have been better if it hadn’t gone on last at the Mutiny tapings which was a good four hours into the card. Fans sounded restless and it seemed to affect the match quality.

The opener between Uemura and KEITA vs. Blackwood and Riley had much better energy which makes sense since at the tapings, it was the second match of the night. Nitpicks aside, this was a solid episode to wrap the Mutiny tapings with. 

Next week kicks off NJPW Strong’s next “tour” titled Collision, which was taped in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania last month.

NJPW Strong results: United Empire vs. TMDK

Tonight saw the third week of tapings from NJPW Strong: Mutiny from Hollywood, California.

Stray Dog Army (Bateman, Misterioso & Barrett Brown) defeated Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight & The DKC

This was a good opener. The match itself felt like its main function was to prop up a future program between Yehi & Bateman. The teams scuffled and jaw-jacked during their ring introductions. Yehi and Bateman went right at each other.

Fans in attendance were catching on to Bateman’s bark. He barks at the crowd and, now, they bark back.

Knight and Misterioso kicked things off for their teams. They had a fast exchange up top. Knight did some flying around the ring, bouncing from rope to rope before arm-dragging Misterioso to the mat. The DKC and Barrett Brown were together next. They too had great chemistry and fire. The DKC asked Brown, “Do you wanna fight?!” and then traded chops.

He and Yehi had great fire whenever they were together during the match. When the bout spilled onto the floor, they again went at it. There were more than a few times in this match where the fight shifted to ringside instead of between the ropes.

Knight landed on Bateman with a pescado on the floor. Misterioso landed one of his own next, taking out Knight.

Back in the ring, The DKC caught Brown with a flying Liu Kang-style kick off the middle rope. The crowd began chanting “D-K-C!” He went for DKC Fire next, but Brown countered, shooting him into his team’s corner.

In the end, Misterioso caught the DKC with a guillotine leg drop off the second rope for the win. Stray Dog Army continued beating down Yehi’s team after the bell.

– A promo from Big Damo (fka WWE’s Killian Dain) aired next. He explained how Tomohiro Ishii had made his debut in England seven years ago with RevPro. He then explained that it was he who beat Ishii upon said debut, and in Damo’s backyard, to boot. He said that Ishii is now NJPW’s gatekeeper figure these days, so he wanted a shot at him on NJPW Strong because he’d beat Ishii just like he did in England seven years ago.

David Finlay defeated Blake Christian

They had a quick exchange before Finlay dipped out to the floor to regroup. Christian hit a low basement dropkick and later used a tope con giro to the floor before using a high crossbody block back in the ring, but only for a count of two.

At just over ten minutes in, Finlay scored a backdrop suplex for a two count. Christian countered with a big lariat. Finlay did a backdrop on the apron.

Finlay teased using his sheleighleigh on Christian. Christian did a 450 splash to a draped Finlay for a close two. Finlay caught Christian with a stunner coming off the ropes and then used the Trash Panda for the win. He again sort of teased using the sheleighleigh on Christian after they finished, but instead he shook Christian’s hand afterward.

Backstage, Finlay cut a promo comparing Christian to a young Will Ospreay before explaining that his next goal would be to win his first NJPW singles title. He said after being with the company for seven or eight years, it was time for a singles title win. He’s been a NJPW tag team champion, but hasn’t won singles gold yet. “I am coming; expect me.”

TMDK (JONAH, Bad Dude Tito & Shane Haste) defeated United Empire (Jeff Cobb & Aussie Open)

All of United Empire came to the ring for the match, so Great O-Khan, Aaron Henare and TJP were at ringside.

Kyle Fletcher of Aussie Open and JONAH kicked the match off. They shoved each other before tying up. JONAH bullied Fletcher into the corner. Fletcher caught him with an enzuigiri, but when Fletcher was coming off the ropes for an attack, JONAH shoved him in mid-air. He flexed at Fletcher in the corner. Cobb tagged in next, which the crowd immediately responded to, but JONAH decided to tag out to Shane Haste instead. 

Haste did a haughty mock walk of Cobb with his chest and shoulders out and all. This amused Cobb, who would later use Haste’s back as a surfboard for a little cowabunga action. This also elicited what could have been Alex Koslov’s best line on commentary in the show’s history when he deadpanned the following: “Shane Haste was a good surfboard.”

Cobb held Haste in a vertical suplex and then tagged in Mark Davis while simultaneously passing Haste over to Davis. Remember, Haste is still hanging in the air upside down. This was a suplex transfer. Davis then tagged Fletcher in and suplex transferred Haste over to him. Fletcher let him down for a moment, then finally snap suplexed Haste onto the mat.

Haste came back with a running cannonball into the corner onto Fletcher. Bad Dude Tito was next and put the boots to Fletcher before tagging JONAH back into the match.

JONAH and Haste worked Fletcher over for a while. Fletcher eventually was able to counter and drop Haste with a brainbuster. He tagged out to Davis, a proverbial house of fire at this point, just past ten minutes in.

Bad Dude Tito took Davis out with a Buff Blockbuster. Aussie Open soon took out Tito with a few double-team combinations. Cobb landed a standing moonsault onto Tito. Haste later blasted Davis with a lariat after a wild back-and-forth between teams. Haste, Davis and the rest were all laid out. The crowd began chanting “NEW JA-PAN!”

Then, finally, Cobb and JONAH got in the ring together, the moment we’d all had been waiting for. They are almost mirror images of each other. The build, the hair, the singlets, the fact that on first glance we expect neither to wrestle the way they do.

They squared off and rammed into each other with shoulderblocks. Neither would go down. The crowd ate it up. The spot wrapped when they crashed into each other with running crossbody blocks. Their fight continued onto the floor, outside the ring and effectively out of the match.

Back in the ring, we saw Aussie Open put Bad Dude Tito away after more double-team work, finishing him with a double-Last of the Dragon-type maneuver.

Afterward, all of United Empire got into the ring together. Great O-Khan grabbed the mic and addressed the crowd in Japanese: “Bow down, peasants!” Now you understand what Aussie Open can do!” He referred to the team as United Empire’s “new assets.”

Final thoughts:

The main event is the go-to match on this week’s episode of NJPW Strong. Jeff Cobb and JONAH’s rivalry could be great down the road, as they teased here, plus Aussie Open were fantastic in their NJPW Strong debut. The match itself had a rapid-fire pace, similar to a “NJPW proper” tag match at Korakuen Hall.

Next week sees the final episode of NJPW Strong’s Mutiny series with Tomohiro Ishii taking on Big Damo in the main event. 

United Empire trios match set for this week’s NJPW Strong

Three members of United Empire will team in this week’s NJPW Strong: Mutiny main event. 

Jeff Cobb will tag with Aussie Open’s Mark Davis and Kyle Fletcher against TMDK’s Shane Haste, JONAH, and Bad Dude Tito. 

In another match announced for this week, Blake Christian will face David Finlay. 

Additionally, Stray Dog Army’s Bateman, Barrett Brown, and Misterioso will take on Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight, and The DKC in a six-man tag to open the show. 

The Mutiny episodes of Strong were taped on April 10 at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles. 

Here is the lineup for this week’s Strong:

NJPW Strong: Mutiny, Saturday, May 28, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • United Empire (Jeff Cobb, Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher) vs. TMDK (JONAH, Shane Haste & Bad Dude Tito)
  • Blake Christian vs. David Finlay
  • Stray Dog Army (Bateman, Barrett Brown & Misterioso) vs. Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight & The DKC

NJPW Strong results: United Empire six-man tag match

Ren Narita and Chris Dickinson went to a time limit draw (15:00)

The crowd chanted “Welcome back!” at Dickinson, who was returning to the ring after an injury at Battle in the Valley in November last year.

Narita and Dickinson grappled in the center of the ring early on. Dickinson went for a double wrist lock but Narita countered and applied one of his own. Dickinson made it to the ropes for a break. They’d trade hard slaps later. Dickinson hit a suplex with a float-over lateral press for two. He used a front suplex on Narita next.

This was a slower paced match. The two would eventually end up trading holds on the mat again, Dickinson mostly with the advantage, holding Narita in top position.

Narita unloaded a flurry of kicks. Dickinson responded with hard chops in the blue corner. He used a shoulder lock on Narita until Narita grabbed the ropes for a break.

From here, Narita would maintain the advantage on offense for a bit. He tied Dickinson into a figure-four leglock until Dickinson broke the hold when he made it to the ropes. Narita continued laying in hard front kicks into Dickinson’s chest. Dickinson then threw hard chops of his own. He took Narita down with a go-behind ankle pick, then slammed Narita back down with a German suplex. The ring announcer made a “two minutes left” call while both were flat on the mat. Once the ring announcer made that call, I got the feeling combined with the overall slower pace of this match that we were getting a draw.

Dickinson drilled Narita with a vertical drop brainbuster for two. He locked in an STF, but Narita made it to the ropes. Narita countered with a sleeper into a cobra twist, but Dickinson hip-tossed him off. Thirty seconds left. Dickinson threw a few hard kicks. Narita caught one. 15 seconds left. Narita locked Dickinson in the cobra twist again, but the time limit was up: Narita and Dickinson wrestled to a time limit draw.

LA Dojo (Clark Connors and Karl Fredericks) with Yuya Uemura defeated The Factory (Aaron Solow and Nick Comoroto) with QT Marshall

Fans booed the hell out of the Factory. QT Marshall kept interfering. Solo used a quick rollup on Fredericks early. Connors and Comoroto jaw-jacked at each other next. Comoroto tried rag-dolling Connors, but Connors was able to take the larger man down with a shoulder block. Comoroto responded, slamming Connors in the center of the ring before working him over in the corner. QT Marshall would sporadically interfere and help work Connors over. Comoroto used a slingshot elbow on Connors, launching himself over the top rope and into the ring before pressing Connors over his head a few times. Connors broke things up and was eventually able to make it to the red corner to tag Fredericks back in. He landed a Stinger splash on Solo in the corner. Marshall laid out Fredericks while he was on the floor behind the ref’s back. The Factory scored a close two before Connors broke up the pin.

Connors and Solo traded elbows before Connors laid Solo out with a snap powerslam. Marshall stood on the apron and started shouting, but Yuya Uemura appeared and dragged him from the apron to the floor. The crowd enjoyed that. Fredericks reappeared and landed with a plancha from the ring. Connors in the ring used a spear and a spinning blue thunder bomb on Solow for the win.

Afterwards, QT Marshall got on the mic. The crowd chanted “shut the f*ck up.” On the broadcast, Marshall’s dialogue was almost inaudible because the crowd was so loud in drowning Marshall out. The crowd started chanting “asshole” at him. Marshall challenged Fredericks to a singles match at NJPW’s Philadelphia show. Fredericks grabbed the mic and asked the crowd if they wanted to see him beat Marshall’s ass in Philly. The crowd obliged.

United Empire (Great O-Khan, Aaron Henare & TJP) defeated Brody King, Taylor Rust & Mascara Dorada

O-Khan was pretty popular with the Hollywood crowd. Dorada was as well and got a nice response when they announced his name before the match got underway.

Taylor Rust and Aaaron Henare were in first. This was Henare’s NJPW Strong debut. Rust caught Henare with a high dropkick before Dorada and TJP were tagged in. They had a fast exchange, trading chops and headscissors. TJP raked at Dorada’s mask, trying to rip it off. The crowd did not approve.

The other four in the match started brawling at ringside while Dorada and TJP kept it going inside the ring. O-Khan came off the apron with a double ax-handle before back in the ring. He tagged in and sat on Dorada’s head while he was in the corner, shoving his ass into the back of Dorada’s head as he posed with his arms crossed.

TJP continued working over Dorada, dropping a knee at one point. He kept ripping at Dorada’s mask. Dorada was able to walk the ropes and take TJP out with a no-hands springboard dropkick before tagging out to King, who went wild on United Empire. King and O-Khan got into it next. They’re roughly the same size, which made for a good visual. King took out both O-Khan and Henare with a double lariat.

O-Khan locked the Claw onto King before Dorada appeared to break it up. Rust tried locking TJP in an ankle lock, but Henare broke it up, so Rust locked Henare in a modified Rings of Saturn-type stretch. TJP broke that up. Henare landed a spinning sit-out sidewalk slam on Rust, setting Rust up for TJP’s Mamba Splash off the top rope, but only got two before Dorada broke the pin.

When Mascara Dorada went for a dive to the floor, he accidentally crashed into his partner, King. TJP followed up with a dive of his own onto Dorada. In the ring, O-Khan and Henare did a double-team fireman’s carry-swinging neckbreaker type maneuver that didn’t look so hot, pinning Rust to win the match.

United Empire continued going after their opponents after the match. TJP finally ripped Mascara Dorada’s mask off, sending the crowd into a boo-frenzy. This also happened to mask the weak in-ring finish just moments earlier. TJP celebrated with Dorada’s mask in the ring as staff rushed Dorada backstage.

After this, Great O-Khan got on the mic and cut a promo in Japanese:

“That does for the Japanese peasants watching STRONG as well. Now you understand! This is Great O-Khan. Aaron Henare. TJP . . .”

The crowd chanted “shut the f*ck up!” at the group.

“Get it? The power of the United Empire!” The three posed in the ring before heading to the back.

Final thoughts:

This was a standard quality episode of NJPW Strong, with the draw at the top of the show being the most entertaining of the the three matches on tonight’s show.

The Factory angle is almost completely out of juice, and it sounds more like the crowd is booing the creative as opposed to booing the Factory themselves. The final bout was good, but what surprised me most was how over Great O-Khan was. It’s the pancake story that people love, isn’t it?

Three matches announced for this week’s NJPW Strong episode

NJPW has announced three matches for this week’s Mutiny episode of Strong. 

In the show’s main event, Brody King, Rust Taylor, and Mascara Dorada will take on United Empire’s Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare, and TJP in a trios match. 

The issues between LA Dojo and AEW’s The Factory will continue to unfold, as Karl Fredericks and Clark Connors will team against Aaron Solow and Nick Comoroto. QT Marshall will be in The Factory’s corner, while Yuya Uemura will be in LA Dojo’s corner. 

In the opening contest, Chris Dickinson faces Ren Narita in a singles match. 

The Mutiny episodes of Strong were taped on April 10 in Los Angeles. 

Here is the lineup for this week’s show: 

NJPW Strong: Mutiny, Saturday, May 21, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • Brody King, Rust Taylor & Mascara Dorada vs. Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare & TJP
  • Karl Fredericks & Clark Connors (w/Yuya Uemura) vs. Aaron Solow & Nick Comoroto (w/QT Marshall)
  • Chris Dickinson vs. Ren Narita

NJPW Strong results: Jay White vs. Hikuleo

Tonight’s episode kicked off the NJPW Strong: Mutiny series, which was taped last month in Hollywood.

Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin, & Adrian Quest defeated Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, & Danny Limelight)

Romero got another loud reaction from the crowd when he arrived. He’s NJPW Strong’s resident Liger figure, always there, always loved regardless of the situation.

The last time Alex Coughlin was at The Vermont Hollywood for NJPW Strong, he donned the traditional Young Lion black trunks/black boots look, but upon beating JR Kratos in a singles match, Coughlin graduated out of Young Lionhood, meaning he had new ring gear. He kind of resembled Jon Moxley during his first NJPW run, with grappling shorts and wrestling shoes.

Limelight and Quest were in first and got into fisticuffs. Limelight got good heat after doing his “ay, Papi” dance, but then Quest caught him in a crucifix and scored a quick two. Romero would tag in later and rifle off his Forever Clotheslines in the corner. People loved it.

When Black Tiger tagged in, he and Limelight used a double-team Reverse U-Crusher.

Kratos tagged in. He chucked Romero down onto the mat with a big body slam while flipping off the crowd. He and Tiger then posed over a laid out Romero. Strong fans love to hate Team Filthy and made it known here.

Romero came back after connecting with a rewind kick and Sliced Bread on Tiger. He took out Limelight with a basement dropkick before tagging out to Alex Coughlin.

Coughlin and Kratos went at it next. They are always awesome together. Coughlin teased a bodyslam on Kratos but Kratos slipped out of the ring after escaping. Adrian Quest followed after Kratos, diving off the top rope onto the floor with a somersault dive.

In the ring, Coughlin was finally able to hoist Kratos from a bodyslam position into a bridging fall-away slam. He only scored a two-count, though, as Tiger broke up the pin to make the save for Kratos.

Moments later, Coughlin would send Danny Limelight spinning after a running lariat, then pinned him with a bridging deadlift German suplex in just over eight minutes.

Before the ring announcer could even finish announcing the results, Kratos ambushed Coughlin, taking him out with a forearm, then laying him out with a seated Bossman Slam onto a chair. Coughlin was stretchered from the ring to the back. Again, the rivalry these two have is fantastic, and the slow burn to whenever they do a singles match for a title, well, that’ll be something.

We saw a quick backstage promo from Chris Dickinson next. He said that after months of sitting on the shelf sidelined with an injury, he was ready to make his return at NJPW Mutiny. He explained that during his first NJPW Strong run, it was Ren Narita who was the one to stop him dead in his tracks. Dickinson said things would not end well for Narita, and that he’d better bring all he has, saying “I’m going to whip your ass and leave you in the dust.”

Handicap Match: West Coast Wrecking Crew (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson) defeated Fred Rosser

If Rosser had won this, he’d have earned a shot at “Filthy” Tom Lawlor’s STRONG Openweight championship.

Royce Isaacs and Jorel Nelson danced their way to the ring alongside their captain, Lawlor. Lawlor, who donned a denim romper for tonight’s show, would join Ian Riccaboni and Alex Koslov on commentary.

When Fred Rosser made his way to the ring, he tossed something to a kid in one of the front rows. You couldn’t see it on camera, but this young fan was very excited about it.

WCWC ambushed Rosser before the bell, but Rosser would come back to clean house, dumping both Nelson and Isaacs to the floor for more of a beatdown. There were no count-outs or tagging in this match, by the way, so these three could have hypothetically been brawling ringside all night. Rosser backdropped Nelson onto the apron, then used a running Death Valley Bomb on him inside the ring, but Nelson rolled out of the ring to avoid getting pinned.

Rosser later put Isaacs in a crossface chicken wing. When Rosser went to the top rope, Nelson appeared on the apron and pushed him off. WCWC then began double-teaming Rosser. They’d then hop on to the stage where announcers Riccaboni and Koslov were sitting and posed for the crowd.

Back in the ring, Rosser returned the attack with a double clothesline. As soon as he built some momentum, Isaacs took Rosser to the floor again and put him down hard with a slingshot powerslam onto the floor.

WCWC put Rosser away moments later with a combination brainbuster/Claymore kick finish. The crowd booed.

Lawlor got on mic afterwards and said Rosser was just like the “losers” who came to see the show. He said Rosser is just like everyone else, always asking for favors or handouts.

“A champion acts a certain way. A champion looks a certain way. And quite frankly, Fred, you don’t even look like a worthy challenger,” Lawlor said. He then told Rosser that he actually looked better bald, then revealed a lock of Rosser’s hair he had kept from when Team Filthy shaved Rosser’s head in Philadelphia last year. Lawlor then made Rosser an offer: Since he didn’t beat WCWC to earn a title shot, Lawlor said that if Rosser shaved his head again, he’d consider a title match.

“How bad do you want it, huh? How bad do you want it, Fred?” Lawlor kept bullying Rosser until Rosser silently accepted the deal. Jorel Nelson then took a pair of electric clippers and shaved a big chunk into Rosser’s hair.

Rosser would grab the clippers away from Nelson and began shaving his head himself in an effort to prove how serious he was about Lawlor’s title. He kept shaving as he looked Lawlor in the eye. The crowd started chanting “Fred!” Rosser then grabbed the mic and asked if he had earned his title shot yet or not. Lawlor took the mic back and asked the crowd if Rosser earned the shot. Before responding, though, Lawlor took the lock of Rosser’s hair he kept and ate it. Yep, “Filthy” Tom ate more of Fred Rosser’s hair. It looked like he had a big chunk of dip in his mouth. The crowd chanted “You sick f*ck!” at him. Then, they started shouting for him to swallow the hair, which, thankfully, he didn’t. “I’m not like the rest of you,” Lawlor told the audience. Lawlor then said his answer was “no” to the title shot offer.

He then made Rosser another offer: At NJPW Collision in Philadelphia, on Lawlor’s birthday, no less, Lawlor would put his Openweight championship on the line against Rosser, but if Rosser loses, he’d be gone from NJPW Strong for good.

Rosser didn’t give an immediate answer. The crowd cheered him as he exited to the back.

U S of Jay Open Challenge: Jay White defeated Hikuleo

Despite White playing an uncompromising heel role, and despite him booting Hikuleo’s brothers from Bullet Club, most of the crowd still really liked him. Some fans played along and gave him a hard time, but in general, Jay White is super over.

White kept avoiding first contact with Hikuleo by sliding out onto the floor or weaving away from Hikuleo’s hands. Some fans started chanting “F*ck you, Switchblade!,” but then a “Let’s go, Switchblade!” counter-chant started.

Hikuleo decked White, laying forearms into White’s back. On the floor, Hikuleo dropped him on the guardrail with Snake Eyes. “This is what you want?!,” Hikuleo shouted. When Hikuleo missed a chop, his hand banged against the ring post. White tried taking advantage and went for a suplex, but the much bigger Hikuleo wouldn’t budge. White then focused his attack on Hikuleo’s legs, ramming them into the ring post while White stood on the floor. He then wrapped Hikuleo’s face in the vinyl ring apron in an attempt to suffocate him.

In the ring, White continued working over Hikuleo’s leg. Hikuleo countered at one point with a strong Irish whip that launched White into the blue corner. He’d then put White down with a hanging vertical suplex as the ten-minute call sounded.

When he went for the Tongan Driver, White slipped away and kicked Hikuleo in the knee. When Hikuleo ran at him with a lariat, White reversed it into a flatliner. He then drilled the larger Hikuleo with a backdrop driver before scoring a count of two with a Bladebuster.

White would hold his finger to Hikuleo’s head and pull the trigger on his figurative gun. He teased throwing Hikuleo with a head-and-arm back suplex, but Hikuleo fought it off. White bounced off the ropes and took Hikuleo out with a chop block to his knee. He’d take Hikuleo down with a dragon screw leg whip. When he went to apply the TTO submission, Hikuleo kicked White away. White went back after him in the corner, stomping away at Hikuleo’s legs again. The crowd was pretty loud in support of White by this point.

Hikuleo power bombed White, but White avoided getting pinned. He went back to using dragon screws to keep Hikuleo down. When he went for the Bladerunner, Hikuleo countered with a chokeslam, wrapping his giant hand around White’s throat. White kicked Hikuleo in the knee to break it. White chopped him a few times, but Hikuleo powered up and took White to the mat with a short-arm lariat. He blasted White with a chop that was WALTER-level, sound-wise.

Hikuleo caught White off the ropes with a snap powerslam, and again went for the chokeslam, but suddenly White countered and laid Hikuleo out with the Bladerunner for three. The crowd was especially hot for the last 15 seconds.

After the match, White grabbed a chair and teased bashing Hikuleo with it, but then sat down and yelled at him instead. When White referred to himself as the “best f*cking wrestler in the world,” the crowd screamed in agreement. Not everything was audible from White since he didn’t have a microphone, but he’d eventually stand up and shoot Hikuleo the “too sweet” gesture in an attempt at squashing any beef they may have had. After a few moments, Hikuleo gave White a “too sweet” of his own; Hikuleo will remain with Bullet Club.

Final thoughts:

This was a good episode of Strong, though it may have been the heaviest story-driven episode they’ve aired so far. The wrestling was top-notch, like usual, but the show was more angle-heavy than it has been in the past. Despite being taped last month, this episode served as the go-home show for tomorrow’s Capital Collision show in D.C..

Jay White vs. Hikuleo was very good and is worth watching. Along with his brawls with the likes of Fred Rosser and Juice Robinson last year, this was likely the best performance in Hikuleo’s career so far. It’s also interesting how popular White has become since his return tour of the States. He’s always been “Switchblade”, a megalomaniacal wunderkind heel, but lots of fans accept him as a hero.

Six matches set for this week’s two-hour NJPW Strong episode

Six matches will air on this week’s two-hour episode of NJPW Strong. 

Bouts from both the Mutiny taping in Los Angeles on April 10 and the April 1 Lonestar Shootout show in Dallas will air as part of the two-hour special. 

In the main event, Jay White will take on Hikuleo in an inter-Bullet Club match. White and Hikuleo have also been announced as tag partners for the May 14 Capital Collision event, facing Kazuchika Okada and Trent Beretta. 

Also set for Saturday, Fred Rosser will face West Coast Wrecking Crew and Team Filthy’s Jorel Nelson and Royce Isaacs in a handicap match. 

Rocky Romero, Adrian Quest, and Alex Coughlin will team against JR Kratos, Black Tiger, and Danny Limelight in another match from the Mutiny taping. 

Rosser, Coughlin, and The DKC will face Tom Lawlor, Kratos, and Isaacs in a trios match from the Lonestar Shootout taping. 

JONAH vs. Blake Christian, plus Bateman and Barrett Brown vs. Hikuleo and Chris Bey from Lonestar Shootout will round out Saturday’s card. 

Here is this week’s full lineup: 

NJPW Strong, Saturday, May 7, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • Jay White vs. Hikuleo
  • Handicap match: Fred Rosser vs. West Coast Wrecking Crew
  • Rocky Romero, Adrian Quest & Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos, Black Tiger & Danny Limelight
  • Fred Rosser, Alex Coughlin & The DKC vs. Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos & Royce Isaacs
  • JONAH vs. Blake Christian
  • Hikuleo & Chris Bey vs. Bateman & Barrett Brown

NJPW Strong Mutiny spoilers from Los Angeles, California

Here are results from Sunday night’s NJPW Strong: Mutiny tapings held at the Vermont in Los Angeles, California.

  • Kevin Knight, Fred Yehi, and The DKC defeated Stray Dog Army (Bateman, Misterioso, and Barrett Brown). Brown pinned DKC after Misterioso connected with a legdrop.
  • Keita and Yuya Uemura defeated Kevin Blackwood and Lucas Riley. Uemara got the win after defeating Riley with a frankensteiner.
  • David Finaly defeated Blake Christian.
  • Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin, and Adrian Quest defeated JR Kratos, Danny Limelight, and Black Tiger. Coughlin pinned Limelight with a German suplex bridge. After the match, Kratos took out Coughlin with a uranage on a chair. Coughlin was then stretchered out.
  • United Empire (Great-O-Khan, TJP, and Aaron Henare) defeated Brody King, Tyler Rust, and Mascara Dorada. Henare scored the pinfall over Rust. After the match, TJP took Doarada’s mask.
  • Royce Issacs and Jorel Nelson defeated Fred Rosser in a two-on-one handicap match. After the match, Lawlor offered Rosser a chance at another Strong Openweight title match if he shaved his head. Rosser accepts. Lawlor also said that if Rosser couldn’t beat him, he wanted him to leave NJPW Strong.
  • Ren Narita vs. Chris Dickinson went to a 15 minute time limit draw.
  • Chris Bey and El Phantasmo defeated Christopher Daniels and Alex Zayne. ELP scored the win over Zayne after a Styles clash and a superkick.
  • Jay White defeated Hikuleo. After the match, Hikuleo gave White the “too sweet” hand gesture.
  • Karl Fredricks and Clark Connors defeated The Factory (Nick Comoroto and Aaron Solo with QT Marshall). Connors pinned Solo after a spinebuster. Marshall challenged Fredericks to a one on one match in Philadelphia, where NJPW will tape on May 15.
  • Jeff Cobb, Mark Davis, and Kyle Fletcher of United Empire defeated JONAH, Bad Dude Tito, and Shane Haste of TMDK. Davis pinned Tito.
  • Tomohiro Ishiii defeated Big Damo.

NJPW of America will hold their next show, Windy City Riot, next Saturday at the Odeum Expo Center in Chicago, with Will Ospreay vs. Jon Moxley headlining.

Full lineup revealed for NJPW Strong: Mutiny

Six new matches have been announced for the Sunday, April 10 NJPW Strong: Mutiny taping in Los Angeles. 

In a singles bout, Tomohiro Ishii will take on Big Damo, the former Killian Dain. 

Aussie Open will make their Strong debut, teaming with fellow United Empire member Jeff Cobb against JONAH, Bad Dude Tito, and Shane Haste. 

AEW’s QT Marshall will bring The Factory to Los Angeles, as Nick Comoroto and Aaron Solo take on Karl Fredericks and Clark Connors. 

AEW’s Christopher Daniels will team with Alex Zayne against Bullet Club’s El Phantasmo and Chris Bey in Los Angeles. 

United Empire’s Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare, and TJP will face Brody King, Mascara Dorada, and Taylor Rust in a trios bout. 

Also announced, Keita Murray and Yuya Uemura will team against Kevin Blackwood and Lucas Riley. 

Here is the full card: 

NJPW Strong: Mutiny, Sunday, April 10 —

  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. Hikuleo
  • Chris Dickinson vs. Ren Narita
  • David Finlay vs. Blake Christian
  • Handicap match: Fred Rosser vs. Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
  • Black Tiger, JR Kratos & Danny Limelight vs. Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin & Adrian Quest
  • Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. Bateman, Barrett Brown & Misterioso
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Big Damo
  • Jeff Cobb & Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis) vs. JONAH, Bad Dude Tito & Shane Haste
  • Karl Fredericks & Clark Connors vs. Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo (w/QT Marshall)
  • Christopher Daniels & Alex Zayne vs. Chris Bey & El Phantasmo
  • Brody King, Taylor Rust & Mascara Dorada vs. Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare & TJP
  • Keita Murray & Yuya Uemura vs. Kevin Blackwood & Lucas Riley

Six matches announced for NJPW Strong: Mutiny

The first match announcements have been made for the NJPW Strong: Mutiny taping in Los Angeles on Sunday, April 10. 

Jay White’s US of Jay open challenge series will continue, as he takes on Hikuleo. Both are members of Bullet Club, but Hikuleo’s brothers Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa have been kicked out of the main Bullet Club unit, so there is some question as to whether his loyalties lie with his family or with the group. 

Also announced, Chris Dickinson will be in action against Ren Narita. Dickinson returns to NJPW after being out with an injury at next weekend’s Lonestar Shootout. 

In another singles bout, David Finlay will face Blake Christian.

Fred Rosser’s battles with Team Filthy will continue, as he takes on both members of the West Coast Wrecking Crew, Team Filthy’s Jorel Nelson and Royce Isaacs in a handicap match. 

Team Filthy’s Black Tiger, JR Kratos, and Danny Limelight will face Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin, and Adrian Quest in a six-man tag. 

In another trios bout, Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight, and The DKC will take on Bateman, Barrett Brown, and Misterioso of the Stray Dog Army. 

The announced lineup so far: 

NJPW Strong: Mutiny, Sunday, April 10 —

  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. Hikuleo
  • Chris Dickinson vs. Ren Narita
  • David Finlay vs. Blake Christian
  • Handicap match: Fred Rosser vs. Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
  • Black Tiger, JR KRatos & Danny Limelight vs. Rocky Romero, Alex Coughlin & Adrian Quest
  • Fred Yehi, Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. Bateman, Barrett Brown & Misterioso

NJPW Strong: Mutiny taping announced for Los Angeles

NJPW Strong: Mutiny will tape in Los Angeles in April. 

The company announced a return to the Vermont Hollywood venue on Sunday, April 10. The taping will kick off a big week for the promotion in the US, as the Windy City Riot show in the Chicago are is set for Saturday, April 16. 

No talent has been announced for Mutiny as of yet. Tickets for the show will go on sale Friday, February 25 at 10 a.m. Pacific time, with prices ranging from $25 for standing room, up to $90 for ringside. 

NJPW has taped Strong at the Vermont Hollywood on two separate occasions before, including last week’s Rivals taping. 

This week’s NJPW Strong episode will be headlined by “Filthy” Tom Lawlor defending the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship against Taylor Rust. 

Also on Saturday’s episode, El Phantasmo takes on Matt Rewholdt, while Karl Fredericks faces Ethan HD. Saturday’s show was taped last month in Seattle.

The lineup: 

NJPW Strong The New Beginning USA night four, Saturday, February 26, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World–

  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Taylor Rust
  • El Phantasmo vs. Matt Rewholdt
  • Karl Fredericks vs. Ethan HD