NJPW Strong results: Daniels & Uemura vs. TMDK

Saturday night saw more matches from NJPW Strong’s Ignition tapings in Hollywood, California, including a Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship Tournament semifinal match as the main event. Here are the results from the episode:

JR Kratos defeated Jordan Cruz

Kratos squashed Cruz in a very short match. Cruz mounted a quick comeback late in this, but the much larger Kratos caught him with a Claymore Kick before putting Cruz away with a powerslam into Boss Man Slam for the finish.

Kratos got into it with the audience before cutting a promo on his rival, Alex Coughlin. He challenged Coughlin to a Last Man Standing match in Charlotte, North Carolina. “You and me, bitch!”

Mascara Dorada, Rocky Romero & David Finlay defeated Negro Casas, Adrian Quest & Lucas Riley

This was Negro Casas’ NJPW Strong debut. He got a good reaction from the Hollywood crowd. David Finlay’s father, Fit Finlay, and Casas often wrestled together in NJPW back in the early 1990s. Ian Riccaboni explained that Casas is actually 2–0 over father Fit Finlay at the moment.

Finlay and Casas started things off and mixed it up on the mat. Quest landed on Dorada with a tornillo a few moments afterwards.

Later, LA’s Lucas Riley was able to counter Rocky Romero’s Forever clotheslines and was able to suplex Romero before tagging out to Casas. The two had a nice exchange together, and the live crowd seemed to love both Romero and Casas. Riley did a running Shooting Star Press onto Romero and earned a two count for it. 

Dorada tagged in later and took Casas out with a rope-walk springboard dropkick. Finlay planted Quest with a uranage into a backbreaker.

Dorada and Finlay did dives to the floor, and Romero was able to put Riley away inside the ring with Sliced Bread to pick up the win for his team in just over 10 minutes.

Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship Tournament semifinal match: Christopher Daniels & Yuya Uemura defeated TMDK (Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls)

TMDK jumped Daniels and Uemura before the bell sounded, but Daniels and Uemura recovered quickly and were soon on offense themselves.

There was a spot early on where Nicholls, who was standing on the floor, took Uemura’s head and bashed it against the ring apron, and it looked like this unintentionally busted Uemura’s nose open. It bled profusely for the remainder of the match. Nicholls began pulling and biting around Uemura’s face. 

After about five minutes, Uemura, whose face was a mess by this point, was finally able to break free from TMDK, suplexing Haste, then tagging out to Daniels.

Daniels cleaned house. He tried doing an STO to Nicholls but it looked messed up. Daniels laid Haste out with a Blue Thunder Bomb, then called for Angel’s Wings on Nicholls, but Nicholls back body-dropped Daniels off his back, blocking the move. He laid Daniels out with a spinebuster, then connected with a low basement lariat for two. TMDK hit the Tankbuster to Daniels but only earned a two count for it. 

Haste went for a diving lariat in the corner, but Daniels parried and rolled to Uemura for the tag. Uemura’s face was still very bloody. The crowd was loud for his comeback. He ran wild on TMDK with shoulder blocks and diving forearm shots. Uemura caught Nicholls with a beautiful dropkick, then screamed in Haste’s face before launching him with a release double overhook suplex. That was the highlight of the match, I think, the screaming suplex spot.

TMDK did a Tower of Power suplex but only earned two for it. The crowd rallied behind Uemura and chanted “YU-YA!” over and over. TMDK took Daniels out with a double-team pendulum slam maneuver. Uemura then reappeared and shoved Haste into Nicholls, which suddenly knocked Nicholls out of the ring. Uemura then leapt high and took Haste over with a standing Frankensteiner and pinned him for the win. 

The crowd erupted, and the announcers treated this like a big upset. Daniels & Uemura advance to the upcoming finals in North Carolina.

Final Thoughts —

The main event wasn’t perfect, but it was good — and not for the reasons you initially might think of. I believe what really made the match special was Uemura’s performance in it. It was “fortuitous blood” that Uemura was able to take advantage of, turning the moment into an advantage. Uemura was able to make the match memorable.

NJPW Strong results: Openweight Tag Team tournament begins

NJPW Strong: Ignition from Hollywood, California kicked off tonight, which featured two first round matches in the STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship tournament.

Christopher Daniels and announcer Ian Riccaboni appeared at the top of the program to explain Karl Fredericks’ absence from the scheduled Openweight Tag Team Tournament. NJPW aired an angle this year which had Fredericks asking Daniels to be his tag partner in the upcoming tournament.

Daniels explained that with such a high level of talent in the tag tournament, he’d be smart to simply step aside and allow a more established unit to take his and Fredericks’ spot. He also explained that with his 29-year background in wrestling, he also knew that opportunities like this don’t often come by, and that if he’s to win the tournament, he’d need a partner who matched his drive and ambition to win.

Daniels then brought out Yuya Uemura. He told Uemura that he had the same fire and heart as he did, and that together they could surprise many teams and become the inaugural tag team champions. Uemura said “Let’s go!” and the two shook hands. Daniels is masterful at this sort of thing and did a good job of smoothing over loose ends. Simple, short, and effective.

STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship, Round 1: Christopher Daniels & Yuya Uemura defeated The Factory (Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo) w/ QT Marshall to advance to the semi-finals

Good opener. The crowd loved Daniels & Uemura and loved to hate The Factory. The heel team were in control early. Daniels took a beating for a bit, but when the five-minute call sounded, he was able to power up and tag out to a fresh Uemura, who re-entered the ring afire with forearms. He has a great-looking flying forearm a la Tito Santana. Uemura landed a running bulldog on Solo, which the crowd loved. He earned a close near-fall after a back suplex, but Comoroto rushed in to break up the pin. He beat on Uemura despite being the illegal man.

Uemura tagged out to Daniels and they double-teamed “The Freak Beast,” Comoroto. When Comoroto ran towards the two, Daniels low-bridged him, pulling the top rope down and letting Comoroto spill out onto the floor. The stocky Uemura followed up with a huge pescado out onto Comoroto.

Inside the ring, Daniels caught Solo with a standing uranage and pinned him after a picturesque double-jump moonsault for the win. Daniels & Uemura advance to the semi-finals of the tag tournament.

JONAH defeated Taylor Rust

Rust had trouble with JONAH’s size early on. He tried chopping him down with low kicks as they circled each other. Despite JONAH’s positioning as heel, the crowd clearly preferred JONAH to Rust, who would crush Rust with a running avalanche a few minutes into this. Rust countered quickly and continued working over JONAH’s legs. JONAH answered back with a buckle bomb.

A fan began chanting “N-X-T!” at JONAH, who pointed at the fan and took a few steps. His response is hard to catch on the broadcast, but inside the venue, it was clear as crystal: “That 2.0 s*** sucks.” The crowd went wild for the line and began chanting “JO-NAH!” over and over.

JONAH blasted Rust with chops out on the floor. Rust threw a few shots in return, but JONAH stayed in control. Back in the ring, JONAH leveled Rust with a back elbow.

After around five minutes of action, the pace began to slow, with JONAH neutralizing Rust on the mat, squeezing him with a waistlock. JONAH went for a splash but Rust moved. He caught JONAH with a scissor kick. JONAH answered with a fireman’s carry throw. Rust would lay JONAH out moments later with a Samoan drop of his own, where he carried JONAH from the corner to the middle of the ring. Rust is damn strong. He followed up with a super-shallow swanton bomb for two.

Rust would ground & pound JONAH with elbows and kicks before locking him in a modified Rings of Saturn submission. JONAH earned a rope break, and both were back to their feet. They traded big strikes. JONAH caught Rust with a lariat, then wrecked him with a spear before squashing him with a splash off the top rope for the win. JONAH remains undefeated in NJPW Strong.

STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship, Round 1: TMDK (Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls) defeated West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) to advance to the semi-finals

This was very good. I don’t believe Haste & Nicholls have appeared together as a single unit for a long time, maybe since their time together in NXT.

Nelson and Nicholls started things off. Nelson whipped his t-shirt at Haste, who was standing on the apron in the red corner. Since both teams play heel, I liked how Riccaboni described them as having different momentums. They do work different styles, with TMDK falling more on the high octane, high impact side, while WCWC prefers to slowly tenderize their opponents before putting them away with impressive double-team finishes.

Haste landed a nice Japanese-style armdrag. Nelson eventually out-powered Haste and slammed him into the blue corner before tagging Isaacs into the match. Isaacs held Haste in a delayed vertical suplex position for over 20 seconds before dropping him. He and Nelson then flexed for the crowd in celebration.

WCWC trapped Haste in the corner and picked him apart, pounding and stomping away. Isaacs landed a backbreaker and Nelson went in for the pin, but only for two. Later, he caught Haste with a jumping knee, then climbed to the top rope. Before he could dive, a reanimated Shane Haste dashed up to the second rope and launched Nelson with a single-arm suplex.

Isaacs and Nicholls were tagged back into the match after this. They duked it out for a few, but Isaacs would tag Nelson back in, and WCWC then laid Nicholls out with a suplex-power bomb combination for a two-count on Nicholls.

When Jorel Nelson went for a German suplex, Nicholls countered and spiked Nelson with a DDT before tagging Haste back in. Haste landed a pretty dropkick on Nelson before crashing into both members of WCWC with a leg lariat in the corner. Nicholls then powerslammed Isaacs and stayed on top of him so that Haste could launch himself off of Nicholl’s back for a cannonball into the corner onto Nelson.

TMDK connected with the Tank Buster on Nelson, but Isaacs rushed in for the save. WCWC took Nicholls out with a double-team Dominator-facebuster combo.

Isaacs caught Haste in the corner and flung him off with a spinning avalanche powerslam. Nelson followed that up with a nice diving elbow drop.

WCWC called for the finish, but when Nelson bounced off the ropes, Nicholls yanked Nelson out of the ring by his ankles, then served him a lariat on the floor. In the ring, Haste blasted Isaacs with a high roundhouse kick. TMDK then put him away with Hell in the Elevator for the win. TMDK advances to the semi-finals.

Final thoughts:

Yet another solid, watchable episode of NJPW Strong that lasted under an hour.

Next week sees Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso) vs. The Midnight Heat (Eddie Pearl & Ricky Gibson) and The Dark Order (Evil Uno & Alan Angels) vs. Aussie Open (Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher) as the STRONG Openweight Tag Team tournament continues. 

NJPW Strong results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson

Tonight saw the second installment of Collision tapings from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which were hosted by Ian Riccaboni and Matt Rehwoldt.

Team Filthy (JR Kratos & West Coast Wrecking Crew) defeated Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC

Coughlin debuted his new post-Young Lion look before the match. He’s now “The Android” Alex Coughlin, walking to the ring wearing a Terminator-meets-Big Van Vader exoskeleton body armor type of thing. With that mustache of his, if you were to put him in a helmet, he’d look just like Man-at-Arms from Masters of the Universe.

Coughlin and Kratos went back and forth before the match got started. Before he got into the ring, Kratos threw a cardboard sign at Coughlin. Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs of West Coast Wrecking Crew went at the Young Lions, Knight and DKC, shoving and jaw-jacking. The crowd started chanting “F*CK YOU, KRA-TOS!” All this action and the bell hadn’t even rung yet.

Nelson and Knight were to start the match off, but once the bell sounded, Kratos went right after Coughlin, ambushing him and whipping him into the barricade at ringside.

Nelson and Knight traded moves. Knight did a high standing frog splash for two. Coughlin came in later and launched Knight onto Isaacs. Team Filthy reconvened on the floor while the babyfaces posed in the ring. While they weren’t paying attention, Team Filthy came back into the ring and took out the three LA Dojo trainees. Moments later, Kratos held Knight up in a hanging vertical suplex while Nelson and Isaacs used hanging vertical suplexes of their own on Coughlin and DKC, while they were on the floor and on opposite sides of the ring. So, we got triple hanging vertical suplexes from different areas in and around the ring.

Team Filthy worked over Kevin Knight for a few more minutes until he was able to tag out to Coughlin, who went suplex-crazy. He deadlifted both Isaacs and Nelson with gutwrench suplexes before slamming them again with a double backdrop suplex. Wow.

When Coughlin lifted Isaacs up on his shoulders, Knight was able to get enough air to dropkick Isaacs off of Coughlin’s shoulders. I don’t know who has the highest vertical leap in pro wrestling right now, but if I had to put money on it, I’d say with confidence that it’s Kevin Knight. This young man “has hops,” as the kids say.

Towards the end of the match, Coughlin and Kratos were finally in the ring together, one on one. The crowd heated up before they’d even touched. This slow-burning program between Kratos and Coughlin is one of the tightest and most effective rivalries going right now. I’ve said this in the past, but these two are building to a massive blow-off match down the road some day, and it’s going to be special.

They traded stiff shots. The crowd was 100% behind Coughlin. Kratos eventually laid “The Android” out with a falling lariat. When Kratos went for an avalanche in the corner, Coughlin caught him in mid-air. The crowd gasped. Coughlin launched the larger Kratos over his head with a front suplex. Kratos rolled to the floor, so Coughlin followed up with a pescado dive, taking Kratos out.

In the ring, the DKC lit Isaacs up with DK Fire chops until Nelson broke it up. The finish saw WCWC first take out Knight with a cool-looking fireman’s carry toss-to-German suplex, then the DKC with a Claymore Kick-brainbuster combo.

Well after the bell sounded, Coughlin and Kratos continued fighting on the floor, and in the ring. Security had to break them up. Kratos teased jumping back into the ring for more, but flipped Coughlin off and walked to the back.

Ariya Daivari defeated Delirious

Delirious bounced off all four ropes to avoid contact with Daivari, evading him, then used a lariat to lay Daivari out. He did nine leg drops before Daivari rolled to the floor.

Daivari used a big uranage slam on Delirious for two. He superkicked Delirious then pinned him after a hammerlock lariat.

Brody King defeated Jake Something

Once he stepped into the ring, King received a star’s ovation from the Philadelphia crowd.

Something, most known for his time spent with IMPACT, is roughly the same size as King, which is somewhat rare in the context of NJPW Strong. He took King out with a jumping avalanche. They traded chops. King later spiked Something with a piledriver and earned a nearfall for it. They clobbered each other with lariats; neither would fall down. King caught Something with a rolling elbow that brought Something to a knee. King bounced off the ropes, but Something decked him with a lariat, sending King to the mat. King answered with a release German suplex. Five minutes in, they collided mid-air when both went for a cross body-block at the same time.

After a few moments on the mat, they were back on their feet trading shots. King bullied Something into the corner with a flurry of Tenryu-styled chops & punches. Something responded with a spear into the corner.

Something was able put King down with a Liger Bomb for a close two-count. He clotheslined King over the top rope and onto the floor, then dove onto him with a tope and landed on his feet. Something is super athletic for a dude his size.

King finished Something off with a huge lariat and the Gonzo Bomb for the win. This was short but great, and these two had good chemistry together.

Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Chris Dickinson

Tanahashi got the type of response you’d expect from the Philly crowd in attendance. It looked like everyone was on their feet.

They went hold for hold in the center of the ring for the first few minutes. While no titles were on the line, it had the pace and feel of a championship bout.

They grappled into the corner and were forced to break and reposition themselves. Tanahashi audibly asked for a clean break, but Dickinson snuck in a kick as they were breaking from the tie-up. Dickinson whipped Tanahashi into the corner; Tana countered with a back elbow followed by a cross body-block from the middle rope. He then played some air guitar to celebrate before tossing the air guitar into the audience.

A bit later, the two found themselves locked against the ropes once again, and when the referee ordered a break, Tanahashi tried sneaking a kick of his own in while they were breaking, but Dickinson caught Tana’s foot and brought him down hard with a dragon screw leg whip. The crowd booed. Dickinson then did some sick air guitar of his own, much to the dismay of the audience.

Dickinson began attacking Tanahashi’s left leg. He slammed it into the mat, and later, while Dickinson stood on the floor, he rammed the leg across the ring post. A dueling chant broke out.

Dickinson continued working over Tanahashi’s knee, using a combination of joint-locks and hard stomps and strikes to the leg. Dickinson busted out the dreaded air bass and patronized the hell out of Tana with it. This must have been what did it for Tanahashi, because a short moment later he was able to bounce off the ropes and catch Dickinson with a flying forearm smash. The crowd chanted “GO ACE!”

Tanahashi did a somersault senton off the second rope. When Dickinson went to kick him, Tana waved “bye-bye” and put Dickinson down with his own signature dragon screw leg whip, then followed with a slingblade. Tanahashi then charged up to the top turnbuckle for a High Fly Attack bodypress, but Dickinson used Tanahashi’s momentum to roll through and come out on top of Tanahashi. From there, he immediately slapped on a figure-four leglock. Tanahashi was eventually able to reverse it, but Dickinson was able to grab the bottom rope for a break. Ten minutes had passed at this point.

They traded elbows in the center of the ring. Tanahashi’s chest was pink from all of the chops throughout the match. Dickinson put Tanahashi in an STF, but Tana was able to grab the bottom rope for the break.

When Dickinson went for a brainbuster, Tanahashi countered with the Twist-and-Shout followed by an Anarchy Suplex. He put Dickinson down with another slingblade but could only keep Dickinson down for two. Tanahashi finally put Dickinson away in the end with the High Fly Flow.

Afterwards, Tanahashi offered his hand to Dickinson, who accepted, then bowed in respect before exiting the ring.

Tanahashi then grabbed the mic and cut an enthusiastic promo thanking the crowd. “You are amazing!!” He also apologized for his English, to which the crowd responded via chant: “IT’S O-K! IT’S O-K!”

Tanahashi then treated us to a final air guitar performance, which included the ceremonial Passing of the Air Guitar from crowd to ring. Tanahashi made a great catch before rocking the hell out as the show wrapped.

Final thoughts:

The opening six-man tag team match and the main event of this week’s NJPW Strong were this week’s highlights. The Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos rivalry isn’t even close to stale and continues to impress. And this week’s main event was arguably a perfect pro wrestling match; not the best, not the most exciting ever, but, functionally, it was perfect in a lot of ways, and a perfect main event for an hour-long wrestling show on a Saturday night.

I might be in the minority on this, but I actually preferred Dickinson’s match with Tanahashi to his recent bouts with Minoru Suzuki. All were excellent, but I think Dickinson really shined with Tanahashi for some reason. He’s the ideal opponent for Tanahashi in terms of size, style, skill, etc., and I hope they’re able to do this one again in the future but for higher stakes—or at least for a longer time.

Next week sees STRONG Openweight Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor take on Fred Rosser in a match that stipulates that if Rosser wins, he becomes the new champion, though if Rosser loses, he must leave NJPW Strong. 

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.

NJPW Strong results: Jay Lethal vs. Ren Narita

Tonight featured the last content from the Strong Style Evolved 2022 tapings from St. Petersburg, Fla.

The DKC defeated Kevin Knight via submission

High quality opener. These Young Lions usually tag together which made the match more interesting; Ian Riccaboni even said they were “like brothers” on commentary. In many ways it was your prototypical NJPW Young Lion style match, but both DKC and Knight added their own distinct wrestling pizazz to make it stand apart from other NJPW rookie openers.

The bout became a much higher impact affair after a few minutes in. The crowd got into it as the match went on, especially towards the finish. Late in the match, the DKC fired up, shouted “DKC FIRE!!” and threw a number of knife-edged chops into Knight’s throat. Knight responded with a basement shoulder-tackle. DKC caught Knight with a flying jump kick off the ropes; it was more like a Bruce Lee type kick as opposed to the modern wrestling fare. It looked cool. He’d later tap Knight out with a crucifix Bomb that he turned into a modified crucifix/Koji clutch submission hold for the win.

Mascara Dorada defeated TJP

In related news, NJPW announced earlier today that TJP would participate in this year’s Best of the Super Juniors 29 tournament in Japan next month.

As for the match between him and Mascara Dorada, it was very good, albeit short. This was Dorada’s first time back in a NJPW ring in six years. The two complemented each other nicely and felt naturally in sync working together.

It was subtle, but on commentary, Riccaboni and Matt Rehwoldt talked about the history between these two. They didn’t mention it, but they are referring to WWE’s 2017 Cruiserweight Classic that TJP won, and Dorada (as Gran Metallik) was a part of.

Early on in the match, Mascara Dorada caught TJP with a perfectly timed Asai moonsault after TJP had slid onto the floor from the outside. His momentum was short-lived, though, as TJP would take back the reins, neutralizing Dorada in the ring with a hammerlock surfboard submission, then released the hold by falling backwards and snapping Dorada’s arm backwards. The crowd booed.

Dorada came back and in the end scored a pinfall on TJP after planting him with a spinning sit-out Death Valley Bomb.

TJP acted like a sore loser afterwards by unmasking Dorada, forcing him to throw a towel over his head to protect his identity. The crowd was heated as TJP left the ring with Dorada’s mask. I imagine we’ll see a rematch between these two down the road based on what we saw tonight.

Jay Lethal defeated Ren Narita

Retired NJPW referee Tiger Hattori joined the English broadcast team for this match.

When the bell sounded, Lethal took his time engaging Narita, instead choosing to please the crowd with his version of the Flair Strut mixed in with a couple of “Woos!” Narita didn’t look pleased. They started off with an extended exchange, going back and forth first on the mat, then running off the ropes. Lethal teased Lethal Injection, but Narita shoved Lethal away.

Ian Riccaboni put over Lethal on commentary as an unsung, underrated wrestler of the scene for years, and rightly so. I mention this because it also reminded me of how young Narita is and how he’s only been wrestling for five years. But he didn’t look out of place at all with a vet like Lethal. It’s almost as though Katsuyori Shibata fully transferred his wrestling spirit into Ren Narita’s body, and what we see now is simply that.

Speaking of Shibata-esque wrestling, Narita later caught Lethal with a few high roundhouse kicks to the chest. Lethal would recover and later attempted a springboard dropkick to Narita as Narita stood on the apron. Narita ducked, but Lethal caught him with a draping cutter which brought Narita back into the ring.

Lethal missed a diving elbow drop, allowing Narita to recover and plant Lethal with a front suplex. He earned himself a nearfall after hitting a nice bridging single-arm suplex. Narita then went for the Narita Special #3, a modified Texas Cloverhold, then transitioned from that into a figure-four leglock. Lethal was able to force the break, and when they separated, we could see Narita’s nose and/or mouth were bloodied up. The announcers weren’t quite sure what happened to cause it, and it wasn’t clear on screen, either.

Lethal used his Lethal Combination on Narita, then followed up with a deadlift brainbuster before connecting with Hail to the King, his Randy Savage-inspired diving elbow drop.

It was around the ten-minute mark when Lethal locked on his own figure four. When Narita got out of the hold, Lethal went for Lethal Injection, but Narita blocked it again, catching Lethal with a sleeper hold before transitioning into a cobra twist submission. The visual here was inadvertently amazing, with Narita’s face now pouring with blood down onto Lethal’s ribcage.

Lethal countered the hold, rolling Narita up for two. They exchanged roll-up pins before Lethal was finally able to catch Narita in rhythm with Lethal Injection and put him away for the victory in just over ten minutes.

Lethal offered Narita his hand after the match. Narita proudly accepted and shook Lethal’s hand while bowing. Both looked terrific in this.

Final thoughts:

This was a short and sweet episode of Strong, clocking in at under an hour with three very good matches that didn’t drag. This episode is the epitome of what we often call an “easy watch.”

The DKC vs. Kevin Knight is a great primer for those unfamiliar with the LA Dojo’s latest prospects. Mascara Dorada vs. TJP had natural chemistry and previewed what could become a longer rivalry down the road between the two. Jay Lethal vs. Ren Narita was one of those Strong matches that if it were in front of a different and/or bigger audience, it’d have torn the house down. Lethal is a pro’s pro, and Narita is something special, proving it all in about ten minutes with Lethal. 

NJPW Strong results: Jay White vs. Chris Sabin

Tonight saw the second installment of the NJPW Strong: Strong Style Evolved 2022 tapings from Tampa, Fla., a giant-sized 90-minute edition.

Hikuleo defeated Andy Brown

Ian Riccaboni and Matt Rehwoldt were joined by retired New Japan referee Tiger Hattori on commentary for this match.

This was “Thicc Daddy” Andy Brown’s NJPW debut. He’s made a name for himself at Championship Wrestling from Atlanta and Championship Wrestling from Hollywood primarily.

Last month in Japan, Bullet Club turned on Hikuleo’s older brothers, Tama Tonga & Tonga Loa. Hikuleo is still technically a member of Bullet Club, and on commentary, the team discussed how Hikuleo is in a tough spot at the moment. Does he go with his brothers? Or does he stick with Bullet Club?

Hikuleo launched Brown into the corner ring pads before blasting him with chops and boots to the face while on the floor. Brown returned the attack, connecting with a running facewash dropkick and a senton. He connected with a flying elbow, but only earned a count of one for his troubles.

Hikuleo caught Brown with a pop-up punch and followed up with a snap powerslam that’d have made Buzz Sawyer proud. He then put Brown away with an emphatic chokeslam for the win.

Josh Alexander defeated Karl Fredericks

This was excellent. Ian Riccaboni was right when he described this as a kind of dream match. These two are roughly the same size, which is above average compared with the majority of wrestlers these days. Both have garnered positive buzz and acclaim among hardcore fans over the past year or so.

They tied up at first, though Alexander outwrestled Fredericks to the mat and took the early advantage. After a few minutes of back-and-forth on the mat, Fredericks was able to land a running kitchen sink knee to force Alexander out onto the floor. Fredericks then caught him with a running tope con giro that looked just like the one Great Sasuke does, the big difference being Fredericks is about a foot and a half taller than Sasuke.

Back in the ring, Fredericks laid in a few chops. Alexander rescinded with a hard running boot. Whenever Alexander took control on offense, he slowed the pace and kept Fredericks grounded. He trapped Fredericks in the corner and worked him over with chops and stomps.

Alexander laid in even more chops to Fredericks, who wouldn’t stay down. The more Alexander chopped, the more Fredericks would recover. He powered up and forced Alexander into the blue corner and began stomping away at Alexander’s face. He connected with a Shibata-style running dropkick to Alexander while he was seated in the same corner. He connected with a scissor elbow for two. Fredericks later put Alexander down with a big spinebuster, locking him in an STF before Alexander grabbed the ropes for a break.

As they stood on the apron, Alexander scooped Fredericks into a slam, then dropped him back-first onto the apron’s edge. Alexander then came off the ropes and took Fredericks to the floor with a low running cross body block.

After earning a two count after landing a diving headbutt from the top, Alexander tried locking in the ankle lock to put Fredericks away. Fredericks himself leveled up once again, and the two went into a heavy exchange of blows that ended with Fredericks going for a Pele kick. Alexander blocked it and attempted the ankle lock once more. Fredericks blocked that and later caught him with a high kick in the corner.

Fredericks did a wild-looking springboard double-stomp to Alexander who was draped across the other rope. After a few moments of respite, both were back to their feet. Fredericks went for quick pinning attempts but Alexander kept kicking out. Fredericks connected with a backbreaker and went for Manifest Destiny but Alexander blocked that, too. Alexander caught Fredericks with an elbow while he was coming off the ropes, then launched him with a release German suplex that he followed up with the C4 Spike (aka Jaydriller) for the win. Again, this was an excellent match, and it’s a great representation of the show’s current product.

After the match, QT Marshall came out with The Factory and tried recruiting Fredericks to become a member. They gave him a t-shirt, but Fredericks threw it back at Marshall, then attacked all three. He had some momentum until Nick Comoroto caught Fredericks with a slam and laid him out. The Factory put the boots to Fredericks until his LA Dojo comrades Clark Connors and Yuya Uemura came out and cleared the ring. Fredericks took the mic and said he wasn’t interested in joining the Factory, but he’d be interested in fighting them. He challenged The Factory to a match at Windy City Riot pay-per-view in Chicago next week, an LA Dojo vs. Factory six-man tag team match.

Eddie Kingston and Fred Rosser defeated Fred Yehi and Daniel Garcia

Kingston got the loudest reaction I’ve heard so far on these Strong Style Evolved ‘22 tapings. There was an “EDD-IE!” chant before he even hit the ring. On commentary, they pushed Kingston’s current AEW program with Chris Jericho and tied the story to this match, explaining why Kingston stormed the ring and went after Daniel Garcia, a member of the Jericho Appreciation Society in AEW.

The match hadn’t officially started yet, and it wasn’t until the fisticuffs ceased that the bell rang. Yehi and Rosser were first for their teams. Yehi rained stomps down on Rosser. Rosser came back with a swinging neckbreaker. He and Kingston double-teamed Yehi before Kingston again ran after Garcia, taking him to the floor.

Back in the ring, Kingston flattened Yehi with an STO. Rosser continued working over Yehi in the ring while Kingston again went after Garia on the outside. Rosser got distracted for a second, which allowed Yehi to take advantage and go on the offensive, taking Rosser down before tagging out to Garcia, who began working over Rosser’s knee. He tripped him up with a dragon screw leg whip. Yehi came in and stomped the same knee. They two tried double-suplexing Rosser, who blocked it before finally tagging out to Kingston.

Yehi and Garcia were able to neutralize Kingston quickly with the double-team barrage. Kingston later powered back and did machine gun chops to Garcia in the corner. Whenever Kingston would gain the upper hand, Yehi and Garcia would return to the double-team approach.

Kingston was able to land a release butterfly suplex on Garcia and crawl his way back to the red corner to tag Rosser in. Rosser connected with a big powerslam and later a running powerslam on Yehi for two. Again, Garcia and Yehi would resort to double-teaming when they began losing momentum.

Later on, Yehi caught Rosser with a hard spinning backfist. He then went for a vertical suplex, but Rosser reversed it into an inside cradle. The finish came soon after, when Kingston took Yehi with a spinning backfist of his own before Rosser laid him out with a fireman’s carry gutbuster for the three-count. This was really good. Kingston and Rosser really complement each other and make a somewhat perfect brawler tag team.

U S of Jay Open Challenge: Jay White defeated Chris Sabin

This was an awesome main event.

So, Sabin was one of Jay White’s mentors while White lived in the US on an excursion from NJPW. He looks to be in the best physical shape of his career right now. He’s 40 but could pass for 30.

It was only a few minutes into the match when Sabin’s chest started bleeding from White’s chops. We’re talking not even two minutes. The two traded holds and Sabin eventually got the better of the exchange when he used an arm drag that knocked White off balance. As per usual, White then slid out to the floor for a breather; the “Keiji Muto” spot. He popped his head in between the ropes repeatedly to break the ring-out count, playing cutesy mind-games with his mentor.

White then walked around the corner of the ring and talked trash into the camera. While he wasn’t looking, Sabin darted out of the ring and took White out with a suicide dive through the ropes. He threw more chops before landing on White with a running cannonball off the apron. He used a side Russian leg sweep to slam White into the guardrail before earning a two-count for a beautiful cross body block off the ropes back in the ring.

Sabin took control for a bit until he went back to the top rope for an attack. White caught him with another hard chop, and Sabin fell to the floor. Sabin’s chest was purple by now.

White took control of the match from here. After dropping Sabin on the apron with a backdrop suplex and gourdbuster, he slowed Sabin’s momentum and held him firmly in the center of the mat, squeezing on a headlock for a while. Sabin kept fighting back but White would shut him down each time until Sabin was able to connect with a jumping enzuigiri kick to White’s face. Sabin then unloaded more strikes on White before catching him with a big missile dropkick.

The two traded DDTs. Sabin answered White’s DDT with a tornado DDT of his own and earned a two-count. The crowd started chanting “this is awesome.” Just over ten minutes had passed when White caught Sabin with a backdrop driver and followed it up with a Bladebuster for two. White began shouting at referee Jeremy Marcus, insinuating that Marcus was slow on the count.

White caught Sabin with a flatliner before folding him with a deadlift release German suplex. The fifteen-minute call sounded after White planted Sabin with a big uranage.

By this point, the crowd had gotten really into the match and were split between White and Sabin, with one side chanting “let’s go, Sabin!” and one chanting “let’s go, Switchblade!”

Sabin later removed his elbow pad, then decked White with a lariat, but when he went for the Cradle Shock, White reversed it into the Bladerunner for the three-count. This was high-level stuff.

Afterwards, White grabbed a microphone and explained that Bullet Club is cutting dead weight, and that the fans would soon learn who is really with Bullet Club and who is really against them. Before he could finish, Hikuleo’s music hit.

As mentioned earlier, Hikuleo is still technically a part of Bullet Club, but his older brothers seem to be the “dead weight” that was cut from the crew. according to Jay White.

White said he knew he was going to have to have this conversation at some point. He told Hikuleo that his brothers’ time with Bullet Club had expired, but his hasn’t. White also told him that he was the future of Bullet Club. He insisted Hikuleo just trust him and listen to him. White threw up the “too sweet” gesture.

Hikuleo agreed that he was the future of Bullet Club, and that Bullet Club was, indeed, “for life,” but before he reciprocated the “too sweet,” he asked White why the future couldn’t start “right here, right now.”

White grabbed the mic and said that if he had what it takes to lead Bullet Club and dominate the wrestling world, then he’d have to teach Hikuleo a lesson.

“I’ll open up those lungs for you and teach you how to breathe.” Before finishing, he told Hikuleo that it was still “his era.” He then exited to the back, leaving Hikuleo alone in the ring.

Final thoughts:

This was another great episode of Strong, and more substantial than usual due to the 90-minute format. White vs. Sabin and Alexander vs. Fredericks are excellent singles matches that are absolutely worth making time for. The tag match between Kingston and Rosser & Garcia and Yehi was a fun brawl, too, a somewhat old-school style one. Kingston and Rosser complement each other extremely well and come off as believable powerhouses together, and it’s clearly because of their ring style. No fanciness, no gloss, just fighting.

New Japan of America’s next event will be next week in Chicago for the Windy City Riot pay-per-view, which can be purchased on either FITE.tv or the NJPW World streaming app. 

NJPW Strong results: Team Filthy vs. David Finlay & Karl Fredericks

The show opened with a backstage segment with Team Filthy (“Filthy” Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Danny Limelight, and Chris Dickinson).

Team Filthy is not playing around anymore, according to Lawlor. “You got a problem with me and the way I handle business?” Dickinson asked. This led to Lawlor and Dickinson having words because Dickinson thought Lawlor doubted whether he’d defeat Blake Christian later in the night. Limelight tried easing the tension in the room, but Kratos said Limelight talked too much. There’s obvious tension amid Team Filthy right now.

Clark Connors defeated TJP to qualify for New Japan Cup USA 2021

These two first squared off in an NJPW ring at the 2019 Super J-Cup, where Connors fell to TJP in the first round.

Connors came for revenge, hitting a spear and two vertical suplexes off the bat. He followed with a big hip toss and chops in the corner.

TJP used an octopus hold and transitioned to a pin, then hit a pescado to the floor.

The middle part of this was slow as both wrestlers traded holds on the mat, with TJP seeming to get the better of that aspect of tonight’s match. He targeted Connors’ left knee and worked it over with a series of attacks and submissions to keep the rabid Connors neutralized.

Connors responded with a snap powerslam at around five minutes in. He could only built a few moments of momentum, though, as TJP would continuously go back to the left knee attacks.

When Connors was finally able to lock in a Boston Crab, TJP seemed like he was almost out of the match, barely making it to the ropes for a break. Later, Connors came off the second rope for a shoulder block, but TJP countered with a perfectly timed drop toe hold as Connors was on his way down. From there, TJP locked in a kneebar on Connors’ tenderized left leg. Connors was desperate to escape but couldn’t make it. He teased tapping, but before he could, he rocked his momentum backwards and managed to cradle TJP into a pin and nabbed the three count for an upset victory.

TJP actually wouldn’t let go of the submission,selling the finish as though he wasn’t pinned. Both were in disbelief. Really good match with a solid story. Connors advances to the first round of the 2021 New Japan Cup USA.

Chris Dickinson defeated Blake Christian to qualify for New Japan Cup USA 2021

WWE’s Blake Christian sprung out of the gate at the bell, diving at Dickinson with a series of fast-paced aerial attacks. Dickinson hung in there, keeping the pace with Christian until he found the right time to shut him down, which happened to be when Christian came off the top rope minutes into this and Dickinson caught him mid-air with a dropkick. He quickly transitioned to a figure four leglock, a strategy meant to ground Christian as soon as possible.

Dickinson blasted Christian with some hard chops before going after his leg once again, at one point wrapping his knee around the bottom rope and cranking on it from the ankle. Dickinson’s offense slowed Christian but didn’t stop him, as Christian mounted a high-flying response to Dickinson’s punishment. We saw Christian fly over the top to the floor with a tope con giro. Back in the ring, he later tried landing a springboard 450 splash, but Dickinson got his knees up in time.

The two traded power spots and pinfall attempts from here, which included a big folding powerbomb from Dickinson. Christian locked in a guillotine choke — kind of a random choice for him, isn’t it? — but Dickinson rolled out, then applied a kneebar of his own. Christian escaped, but Dickinson zoned in on Christian’s weakened knee and put him back down onto the mat with a dragon screw leg whip, and later, a nasty half-and-half suplex.

The way Dickinson put Christian away was so smart. As he went for a piledriver, Christian resisted by sandbagging his bodyweight down, so Dickinson grabbed onto Christian’s injured leg, or the same one he’d worked on in the match, and pulled on it for leverage. This allowed Dickinson to get Christian high enough off the ground and hit the piledriver. This was probably Christian’s best match in his run on NJPW Strong, while Dickinson continues to steal the spotlight.

Karl Fredericks & David Finlay defeated Team Filthy (“Filthy” Tom Lawlor & Danny Limelight w/ JR Kratos)

It should be noted that over the past two weeks, Finlay had the two best singles matches of his career, against both Jay White and Will Ospreay in this year’s New Japan Cup proper, and I don’t think anyone would disagree. While tonight’s show was taped months prior, it’s still great evidence of “the new Finlay” that developed over 2020.

Also of note is that Lawlor has already qualified for the 2021 New Japan Cup USA that will start next week.

Finlay and Lawlor were in first for their teams. Lawlor feigned a grip fight up top, then did the Ric Flair strut. Classic. They then fought for a proper takedown; Finlay was able to trip Lawlor, but Lawlor stayed in step with Finlay on the mat. It was ultimately a stalemate, which then saw both Limelight and Fredericks tag in. Something Fredericks likes to do these days is a SANADA-style split-legged leapfrog, but the visual is unreal because of how big the dude is. His vertical leap must be 50 inches, at least.

Limelight tagged out to Lawlor, who was able to cut Fredericks back down to the mat, softening him up for Limelight. Limelight tagged in next and laid in a few hard kicks before tagging back out to Lawlor.

Team Filthy continued to work Fredericks over in the blue corner, with Limelight using a running bulldog for two at one point. When Lawlor tagged back in, he used an ankle lock on Fredericks, but Fredericks escaped the hold with a forward roll, and the momentum from the roll launched Lawlor into the red corner post. With Lawlor dazed, Fredericks tagged out to Finlay, who by now was the proverbial house of fire.

Finlay put Lawlor down with a high dropkick and then a flying back elbow from the second rope. Lawlor used an exploder suplex in response. The two traded bigger and bigger moves before again reaching a slight stalemate. Both tagged out to their partners, but it was Fredericks who had the upper hand in the ring. He used Shibata’s basement corner dropkick on Limelight and later hit a spinebuster for a close two.

Fredericks went for his Manifest Destiny DDT finish, but Limelight blocked it and was able to muscle Fredericks into the corner and tag out to Lawlor. Limelight blasted Fredericks with a superkick as Lawlor held Fredericks in a waistlock, then dumped him over his head with a German suplex. Announcer Kevin Kelly called the spot like the match was over when Fredericks kicked out just in time.

The turning point in this came as Lawlor held Fredericks in a choke sleeper and Limelight was about to come off the top rope until Fredericks shoved Lawlor forward. Team Filthy collided in the corner, which gave Fredericks the chance to tag out to Finlay again.

There was a lot of action in the last couple minutes of this. Lawlor used Tenzan’s TTD on Fredericks, effectively eliminating him from the match as he rolled to the floor afterwards. When Lawlor turned around, though, Finlay caught him with a stunner. Limelight then caught Finlay with a cradle fisherman’s buster for two. He landed a big jumping knee strike before Finlay turned Limelight inside-out with a lariat, then spiked him with Slapshot, his signature brainbuster-to-shoulderbreaker finish, for the win in just over 17 minutes.

A winded Finlay spoke to cameras backstage after the match. He said Lawlor impressed him tonight. He also mentioned that while he hadn’t ever really tagged with Fredericks, he thought they were “pretty damn good together.”

Finlay then said he wants Lawlor in a singles match next. He said he remembered watching Lawlor in the UFC at Hooters back in the day, but now that Lawlor was in NJPW, Finlay wanted Lawlor to step into his ring, his world.

Final thoughts —

This was another solid show topped off by a great main event. The way this episode was booked made for a nice “go-home show” for the New Japan Cup USA tournament that kicks off next week.

Here’s the full bracket for New Japan Cup USA 2021:

NJPW Strong results: Chris Dickinson debuts

We saw a Filthy Tom promo at the top of tonight’s show.  He said Rust Taylor had a “white belt performance” against Jeff Cobb, and said the Team Filthy sponsors wanted him gone, so he kicked him off the team. This is what they’re doing to explain his absence since he’s gone to NXT. Lawlor also built up who “X” would be later on tonight in the main event, mentioning he picks from the best fighters from around the world.

Before matches got started tonight, they aired a quick video of all of the regular performers on the show with her name and a clip of them wrestling. Good introduction for new or casual fans.

Clark Connors defeated Kevin Knight

Kevin Knight is making his Strong debut. He played college football, and later trained in PNW with Buddy Wayne like Clark Connors did. 

Excellent and very technical wrestling in this match. It was comparable in quality with any of the Young Lions matches from this year. High quality stuff.

Knight is about the same size as Connors, and even more jacked. He didn’t wrestle like most rookies and kept right up with Connors throughout the match. He used two high dropkicks, one knocking Connors off the top rope to the floor, before he locked on the Boston Crab. Connors grabbed the ropes for a break. Connors slapped on a Crab of his own and quickly got Knight to tap. Good match.

Rocky Romero defeated The DKC

This match went to the mat early on, both trading holds and showcasing their grappling skills. Less hard hitting than the previous match, more smooth and deliberate in pace. This lasted a few minutes before Rocky and DKC traded hard elbows. Romero got the better of the exchange, then went to work on the DKC’s left arm. DKC mounted a comeback towards the finish, at one point scoring a two-count with a Northern Lights suplex. Romero took the W here, however, after going back to DKC’s left arm and locking in an armbar for the submission.

After the match, DKC got the mic and apologized for losing. He claimed he wasn’t focused. He then asked LA Dojo head trainer Katsuyori Shibata to help him train, making a public request to join the LA Dojo. Shibata came to the ring and shouted “COME. WITH. ME!” So it looks as though we will see even more of the DKC going forward.

Kevin Kelly hosted an interview with Bateman of ROH. Batemen explained that his motivation is simply to go into the ring and show what he can do, and that he is a “cruel but fair” man. He also talked about training at the NJPW LA Dojo in the past. Kelly brought up that he was “kicked out” of the dojo. Bateman neither confirmed nor denied the incident. He told fans to keep their eyes open, and after he arrives, the audience will understand just how “real” he is.

Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor, Danny Limelight and Chris Dickinson) defeated Brody King and the Riegel Twins

The mystery partner for tonight, “X,” turned out to be “Dirty Daddy” Chris Dickinson. Fantastic score for NJPW Strong if he’s in as a regular. He resembled a young Bas Rutten in the ring at first glance.

Limelight tagged Dickinson out of the match immediately after the bell sounded. Limelight claimed he’d show Dickinson how it’s done, then was bowled over by Brody King when he tried running into him.

Both Riegel Twins used a double suplex later on, putting Limelight on his back. Moments later, Limelight tagged back out to Dickinson, who blasted Logan Riegel with a chop upon entering. Really loud, in fact. Later we could see that Logan’s chest was bleeding from the chop. JR Kratos tagged in and bullied Logan some more.

Limelight played heel well in this match, it stood out. When Dickinson and Brody King were in the ring together it was fireworks, even if it was for only a half minute or so. Limelight did a big Fosbury flop onto the other team, who was on the floor late into the match. We also got a quick preview of King vs. JR Kratos, as the two had a hoss exchange inside the ring before Limelight put away Logan Riegel with a running Death Valley Driver.

Dickinson cut an awesome and very intense promo with his teammates after the match. He pointed to the Lion Mark on the backdrop backstage and explained how NJPW has been his goal from day one. He said he was so happy that Tom Lawlor called him up to take care of a little business in New Japan, and that now that he’s here, Dickinson said they will “take nobody alive” as a team. 

Before exiting, JR Kratos told Brody King that he hoped he had eyes in the back of his head.

Final thoughts:

After two weeks off, NJPW Strong is back with some momentum. We saw a few debuts tonight, first from the impressive Kevin Knight, and later from Chris Dickinson. Bateman appeared and will make his official NJPW Strong debut in the next few weeks. The DKC is now part of the LA Dojo as well, which will make for an interesting new story for the show down the road. Solid show all around, especially in terms of actual wrestling inside the ring.

Next week sees Fred Rosser, ACH & Blake Christian against the Bullet Club team of KENTA, El Phantasmo & Hikuleo, plus more to be announced in the coming week.

NJPW Strong results: KENTA vs. Brody King

Report —

Rocky Romero defeated Danny Limelight via submission

The mentor-mentee program between these two has been boiling slowly over the past few months, and this seems to act as the blow-off match.

Romero went after Limelight before the bell sounded. They let their hands go early, exchanging hard open hand strikes. Romero went for his patented Forever Clotheslines in the corner early, but Limelight moved out of the way, then threw him out of the ring and started working Rocky‘s left arm. That’s been a subtle angle Romero has milked over the summer into these current episodes, the injured left arm and his opponents consistently targeting it.

Romero mounted a comeback with another lariat out of the corner, then a springboard dropkick to Limelight as he was draped over the second rope.

Limelight answered, using a front suplex off the ropes, then turning the hold into a modified key lock once they hit the mat. Romero made it to the ropes for a break. Rocky used sliced bread a for close two count.

Moments later, Romero used a falcon arrow directly into an armbar for the submission victory.

Good match. Rocky iced his arm in the ring afterwards.

Jeff Cobb defeated Rust Taylor

Rust Taylor just signed with WWE NXT. Cobb is scheduled to wrestle Shingo Takagi for the NEVER Openweight Championship at Wrestle Kingdom 15.

This started off with a bit of standing chain wrestling and some flashy stuff from Taylor. Cobb eventually out-muscled Taylor and slammed into the mat. Just before Cobb tried a standing moonsault, Taylor blocked it and locked in a modified armbar/triangle thing. Taylor continued going after Cobb’s left arm from there.

Cobb used his gachi-muchi power again, muscling out with a swinging back suplex and standing moonsault.

Taylor responded by going after Cobb’s arm once again, keeping him on the mat, neutralized. Taylor threw a flurry of European uppercuts late in this, but ultimately it wasn’t enough, as Cobb planted Taylor with Tour of the Islands just a few moments later to win this one.

Another solid match.

Fred Rosser and PJ Black defeated Team Filthy (JR Kratos & “Filthy” Tom Lawlor)

Kratos looks massive. He reminded me of Steve Williams with the red and white color scheme tonight.

Kratos and Rosser were in first, but it wasn’t long before Black had tagged in and took a beating from Team Filthy. Kratos dragged Black to his team’s corner and tagged in Lawlor, who worked Black over for a few minutes. When Black tried a leapfrog, Tom countered, locking in an ankle lock after taking Black out of the air.

Black later reversed the momentum, escaping out of Lawlor’s German suplex attempt and somehow found a way to tag out to Rosser, who proceeded to clean house. He knocked Kratos off the apron to the floor, then launched himself and Lawlor from the ring to the floor with a lariat.

Rosser then jumped off the apron, launching himself at Lawlor on the floor. Go Fred. After a few more moments of brawling and chaos outside the ring, Rosser and “Filthy” Tom threw down and had a hot exchange, the final sprint of this match.

Rosser and Black began double-teaming Kratos. Lawlor tried making the save but accidentally got knocked to the floor by his partner. That fatal flaw led to a Black landing a springboard 450 splash on Kratos for the win.

Rosser and Lawlor’s mini-feud continues on NJPW Strong continues.

KENTA defeated Brody King to retain the right to challenge for the IWGP U.S. Championship

A slick promo package aired for this beforehand.

KENTA talked trash at King when both had made it to the ring, before the match.

KENTA tried avoiding King early on, holding himself between the ropes until the much larger King would back off. King simply went to the corner and dragged KENTA back to the middle to fight. King dwarves KENTA, which made for a pretty unique visual.

KENTA threw big kicks early. King ate them without wincing, then went after KENTA. King slowed the pace and punished him with a neck lock and some hard chops.

KENTA played chickensh*t heel perfectly throughout this. He tried escaping the ring a few times until he could find King distracted enough to catch him out of nowhere, using a stun gun from the apron to the floor.

KENTA’s chicanery opened up a chance for him to step in and dictate the pace for a little while. He used dozens of low kicks and one dragon screw leg whip in an attempt at chopping King down to the mat from the bottom up.

Later, King answered back with a huge jumping lariat, but he he couldn’t make the pin because of his knee. KENTA would throw on in a figure four leglock on King, who screamed in pain before he was able to grab the ropes, forcing KENTA to break the hold.

The two were soon on the apron next, where KENTA blocked a chokeslam attempt from King, then spiked King with the “Greed Killer,” his signature draping DDT. This earned him a two-count. He and King exchanged hard strikes until King planted KENTA with a sudden black hole slam, followed up with a big piledriver for two.

KENTA blocked King’s Gonzo Bomb finisher, but accidentally shoved King into the referee in the process. The ref lay dazed in the corner while KENTA spiked King with a DDT, then went to the floor to grab his IWGP US title briefcase. He brought it into the ring and smashed King in the head with it twice.

KENTA then blasted King with a penalty kick. KENTA lifted King into a fireman’s carry, then planted a knee in his face, a picture-perfect Go2Sleep to put King away. KENTA wins, and in doing so, he keeps his right to challenge for the IWGP US title.

**********

Afterwards, KENTA grabbed a microphone and shouted “Where are you Jon Moxley? I don’t wanna waste time anymore. I’m ready to fight anytime anywhere. Jon Moxley, I’m coming for you.”

Final thoughts —

A solid episode of NJPW Strong, with KENTA and Brody King delivering what could arguably be considered as a G1-level match. This was on par with KENTA’s main events on Strong with Jeff Cobb earlier in the year.

The only real weak point in this week’s show is the fact that it looks so obviously taped, similar to what we saw in some of last week’s episode. That can’t be helped, of course, because of the nature of how things are in 2020 at the moment. That nitpick aside, this was yet one more solid hour of pro wrestling.

The subtle angles between Danny Limelight and Rocky Romero and “Filthy” Tom and Fred Rosser were interesting, but the main event between KENTA and ROH’s Brody King was the clear standout.

NJPW Strong results: Jeff Cobb vs. KENTA

The second episode of New Japan Strong aired tonight  NJPW World. This week featured two of the NJ Cup USA 2020 semifinal matches. The winner of this tournament will earn a title shot at IWGP US champion Jon Moxley.

Barrett Brown and Logan Riegel defeated Clark Connors and Jordan Clearwater

Connors and Clearwater went after Barrett Brown and Logan Riegel before the bell. All four jaw-jacked and were shoving each other.

These guys wrestled with an intense, palpable energy from the get-go. Jordan Clearwater is a really tall blonde fellow trained by Karl Anderson. He and the opposite team had appeared on NJPW USA shows in the past but tonight was their TV debut.

Towards the end of the match, Clearwater tagged himself in while Connors wasn’t looking. He went to finish off Brown who countered Clearwater’s move into a schoolboy pin to pick up the win.

These four worked their asses off and really laid into each other here. All four impressed.

PJ Black, Misterioso & Blake Christian defeated ACH, TJP & Alex Zayne

PJ Black’s team ambushed their opponents before the bell rang. This was ACH’s first match back in NJPW since November 2018. He was charged up for this.

PJ Black and Alex Zayne crashed into each other with simultaneous cross-body blocks early on. ACH and Blake Christian were in next and had a quick exchange. The same went for Misterioso and TJP.

TJP planted Black with a tornado DDT. ACH went did a few dives in row to the floor. Alex Zayne landed a nutty-looking shooting star press double-knee drop onto a bent-over PJ Black. Jeez. Blake Christian looked particularly good in this and could shine a little bit at the end before Black pinned him after a springboard shooting star press.

This was an all-action car crash match—that’s a compliment, by the way—that did a good job of showcasing each wrestler in a short window of time.

New Japan Cup 2020 USA Semi-Final match: David Finlay defeated Tama Tonga

This was good and probably could have been longer. Tonga went down clean after Finlay stuck the acid drop for the clean win. They sold this as a pretty big upset on commentary, and a big win for Finlay, who advances to the tournament finals next week. 

In his post match promo, Finlay claimed Tonga couldn’t ever beat him without help from Bullet Club, and he just proved it tonight.

New Japan Cup 2020 USA Semi-Final match: KENTA defeated Jeff Cobb

This was really good. Cobb is hitting some kind of next level in his career right now, and he’s developed a style no one can really imitate. KENTA also looked less inhibited these days, and he’s clearly enjoying his life as a heel.

The finish came when Cobb went for the Tour of the Islands, but KENTA grabbed the ref by his shirt and slid out of the hold, then whipped Cobb into the referee in the corner. Ref was out. Cobb grabbed KENTA and pinned him with a bridging pump-handle suplex, but the ref was still out. Cobb went for another Tour of the Islands slam, but KENTA was able to slide out and land a low blow while the ref still wasn’t looking. He tied Cobb into a small package for the sham victory.

Final thoughts:

This week’s episode had a different feel to it compared with last week’s debut, with higher energy and higher stakes. The tag matches added a lot to it. The new faces we saw tonight were impressive, particularly Blake Christian and Barrett Brown. Cobb vs. KENTA was a standout match, and while I thought tonight’s finish was well executed, I also feel NJPW needs to ease up on schmozz-y finishes, especially the ones with referees getting knocked out on every card. Regardless, this was another really good hour of Friday night pro wrestling.