Tonight saw the next set of Detonation tapings from Hollywood, California.
Bateman of Stray Dog Army appeared at the top of the show with Ian Riccaboni & Alex Koslov. He talked about his match on the show against newcomer Jakob Austin Young. Bateman mentioned that the two had wrestled long ago, and that tonight he’d be checking to see how much “love” is in Austin’s violence these days.
Bateman defeated Jakob Austin Young
Bateman bullied Young for a long while until Austin connected with a leg lariat after a few minutes. The crowd then got behind Bateman, the heel, chanting “Let’s go Bateman” when Austin would get in any offense. Young hit a back suplex for a count of two. In the end, Bateman put Young away with a tombstone piledriver for the win.
KENTA defeated Bad Dude Tito
This was good. KENTA got a great reaction on his way to the ring. Early on, Tito bullied KENTA, knocking him off his feet with shoulder blocks and shouting things like “You’re too small!!” and “Too much power!!”
Throughout the match, KENTA targeted Tito’s knees and worked them over for a good while. Later, he smashed Tito with big kicks to his chest. Tito would return with a short kick to KENTA’s breadbasket followed by a nice spinning enzuigiri to the back of the head. KENTA would take Tito off his feet again with a dragon screw leg whip, then blast him with a big basement dropkick in the corner, Shibata-style.
When KENTA went for the GTS, Tito reversed it into a Blue Thunder for two. The finish saw KENTA grab the ref while Tito held him in a fireman’s carry. He used this moment to slip out of Tito’s clutch, and then, behind the ref’s back, kicked Tito in the groin then cradled him for the hollow victory. I’d love to see another one between these two next year.
Emily Mae interviewed STRONG Openweight Champion Fred Rosser and talked about his upcoming title defense against JR Kratos, who didn’t reveal his full gameplan, though he did mention that he was planning to run Kratos’ gas tank down to empty. They’ll face off in the main event on next week’s episode.
STRONG Openweight Tag Team Championship: Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) (c) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso)
Motor City Machine Guns, the second tag team champions, took on Stray Dog Army, who recently won their number-one contender match to earn their title shot this week.
After about five minutes, the Stray Dog Army took control. Brown finally tagged out to Misterioso, who quickly dove onto Sabin on the floor then hit a slingshot double-knee drop onto Shelley in the ring. Later, Stray Dog Army double-teamed Shelley, with Brown connecting with a basement dropkick before Misterioso used a quebrada in the ring for two.
When Misterioso went for a second-rope moonsault, Shelley got his knees up and Misterioso crashed into them. Shelley tagged Sabin in and Misterioso tagged Brown. Sabin caught Brown with a huge tornado DDT for two. They did an assisted flatliner to Brown for another close nearfall.
Brown did a dive onto MCMG onto the floor and Misterioso followed up with a big Asai moonsault. He followed up back in the ring with a guillotine legdrop onto Sabin for two.
In the end, MCMG put Brown away with the Dirty Bomb in 12:11 to pick up the win and successfully retain their tag titles.
Final thoughts:
This was a short but solid episode of Strong, with KENTA and Bad Dude Tito and the main event tag match being the highlights of the show this week.
The next set of matches from Detonation will air next week and features Fred Rosser defending his STRONG Openweight championship against Team Filthy’s JR Kratos.
The Openweight Tag Team titles will be on the line on Saturday’s NJPW Strong Detonation episode.
In the show’s main event, Chris Sabin and Alex Shelley of the Motor City Machine Guns will defend their NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship against Barrett Brown and Misterioso of the Stray Dog Army. The Machine Guns captured the Tag titles at Rumble on 44th Street in October.
KENTA is also set for singles action on Saturday’s show, facing Bad Dude Tito.
In Saturday’s opener, Stray Dog Army’s Bateman will face Jakob Austin Young.
Strong’s Detonation episodes were taped Sunday, November 20 in Los Angeles at the Vermont Hollywood.
Here is this week’s lineup:
NJPW Strong Detonation, Saturday, December 17, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship: Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) defend against Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso)
Below are spoilers from Sunday’s NJPW Strong: Nemesis taping held in Los Angeles.
**********
Fred Rosser defended the NJPW Strong Openweight title against Peter Avalon on Sunday night at the Nemesis taping in Los Angeles.
Elsewhere on the show, a new number one contender was crowned for Strong’s top Championship.
Here are results from the taping, courtesy of PWInsider:
Blake Christian defeated Keita Murray
Eddie Kingston, Homicide & David Finlay defeated “Filthy” Tom Lawlor, Bobby Fish & Danny Limelight
Jay White and Kingston shot an angle to set up a match on the January 18 show in San Jose
Mascara Dorada defeated Che Cabrera
West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) defeated C4 (Cody Chhun & Guillermo Rosas)
Mistico defeated Misterioso
KENTA defeated QT Marshall
NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship: Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) defeated Roppongi Vice (Trent Beretta & Rocky Romero) to retain the titles
Jeff Cobb defeated Bad Dude Tito
Jay White & El Phantasmo defeated Alan Angels & Hikuleo
Number one contender’s Strong Survivor match: KENTA won the match by pinning Wheeler Yuta
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Fred Rosser defeated Peter Avalon to retain the title
Tonight saw the final set of matches from the NJPW Strong: Nemesis taping in Hollywood, California.
While Ian Riccaboni and Alex Koslov ran down tonight’s lineup at the top of the show, Christopher Daniels showed up as he was scheduled to face The DKC on tonight’s episode. Daniels told the announce team that he didn’t need any friends at the LA Dojo and didn’t care that everyone was upset with his recent actions toward members of the LA Dojo.
He then addressed DKC, saying that the Young Lion would finally be in the ring with someone who could teach him something, though the sad part would be that DKC would also learn how little he truly knows. After saying “class is in session,” Daniels then put his shades back on and walked away.
Kenny King defeated Gregory Sharpe
This was a good opener. Sharpe has appeared on recent episodes of Strong and often teams with Jakob Austin Young. King and Sharpe locked up early, but King quickly rolled out onto the apron and did the lackadaisical Los Ingobernables pose, just like his teammate Rush in La Faccion.
Later, Sharpe hit a really nice diving bodypress off the top rope for two. When Sharpe would attempt another aerial attack from the top, King threw a short dropkick to the ropes, wobbling Sharpe off balance causing him to slip and fall. King looked to the crowd and pointed to his head, the universal wrestling gesture for “I’m smart.” King hit a vertical suplex and floated over immediately to follow up with some ground and pound which was nice.
Sharpe came back with a pounce, but instead of shoulder tackling King, he threw a dropkick instead. (Pounce kick?) He then put Sharpe down with a German suplex for a count of two.
King answered with a release Dragon Suplex followed by a capoeira-style kick to Sharpe’s head followed by a nice standing spinebuster for a two count.
When King went to the top for an attack, Sharpe ran up the ropes and gutwrench superplexed King back into the ring. He landed a short, but sharp, running basement dropkick for a close near fall. King would finally put Sharpe away with a picture-perfect Royal Flush for the win. Again, this was a solid opener where both King and Sharpe looked good.
Christopher Daniels defeated The DKC
The DKC was defending the honor of the LA Dojo and was fired up as he waited for the bell to ring. Daniels gestured for DKC to calm down. They would lock up and trade a few holds before Daniels took DKC to the mat and slapped him in the back of the head with no respect whatsoever for the Young Lion.
One of Daniels’ most impressive skills is to take a fairly conservative or fundamental wrestling sequence and make it look not only compelling and smooth, but also completely in his style. The subtle technique he uses is as masterful as it is invisible.
He took DKC down hard with an exploder suplex for two. He would use a few hurricanranas to counter back with, the second one coming off the top rope. He then hit a somersault dive right onto Daniels after coming off the ropes. I don’t believe I’ve seen someone do that in the ring before. He then did DKC FIRE, where he laid Daniels across his knee and proceeded to give him multiple knife-edged chops into the neck. He slammed Daniels to the mat and dropped one more falling chop onto him before taking him out with a diving single-leg “Liu Kang” kick.
When DKC went back to the ropes for another flying attack, Daniels knocked him off. He then landed the double-jump moonsault to score the victory.
Afterwards, he gave The DKC a piledriver for good measure, got in his face, and talked some more smack before leaving. The crowd started chanting “One more time!” at Daniels after the piledriver. It’s weird that Daniels would literally tell off the crowd during the match and still treated him as a babyface.
Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, David Finlay & Alan Angels defeated Bullet Club (Jay White & El Phantasmo) & West Coast Wrecking Crew (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson w/ Bobby Fish)
This was your typical fast-paced, all-action NJPW multi-man tag match. The Bullet Club guys got star treatment from the crowd. White & Tonga looked good together when they were in. WCWC was able to show off a lot of cool double-team spots. Finlay & Angels looked great. Hikuleo put El Phantasmo down with a massive chokeslam. Phantasmo did a lot of his goofing off spots. He did the cartwheel back rake he does in most of his matches which Riccaboni called a “dermal strike.” Tama Tonga would pick up the win for his team after taking Jorel Nelson out with a Gun Stun for the win.
Final thoughts:
This was a solid and kind of eclectic episode of Strong. The more I see Gregory Sharpe on the show, the more I enjoy him and imagine he has tons of potential. Christopher Daniels working with top rookies has also become one of my favorite things to keep tabs on. He’s masterful and he knows how to make younger wrestlers feel important and interesting, but in an organic way, not at all forced. Credit to both he and DKC.
The main event was good too, though if you watch the show regularly, you knew what to expect. I thought the most interesting takeaway was how good White & Tonga looked together in the ring during the match and wonder if we’ll see another match between them next year.
Next week kicks off NJPW’s last set of tapings for the year at Nemesis in Hollywood, California.
NJPW has added two matches to the lineup for Nemesis.
Eddie Kingston will team with Homicide and David Finlay to take on Team Filthy’s Tom Lawlor, Bobby Fish, and Danny Limelight on the show. Fish returned to NJPW on Strong last week and attacked Homicide before revealing he has joined Team Filthy.
New Japan also announced a STRONG Survivor match for Sunday. The match will begin as a battle royal until the final four participants are left. From there, the match becomes a four-way elimination match with the winner earning a future shot at NJPW STRONG Openweight Champion Fred Rosser.
NJPW Nemesis takes place Sunday, December 11, from the Vermont Hollywood in Hollywood, California. Matches will be filmed for future episodes of NJPW STRONG. The updated lineup for the show is as follows:
NJPW Nemesis 12/11 lineup:
Jay White & El Phantasmo vs. Hikuleo & Alan Angels
Homicide, David Finlay & Eddie Kingston vs. Tom Lawlor, Bobby Fish & Danny Limelight
Strong Survivor match
Jeff Cobb vs. Bad Dude Tito
KENTA vs. QT Marshall
C4 (Cody Chhun & Guillermo Rosas) vs. West Coast Wrecking Crew (Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson)
An eight-man tag team bout headlines this week’s NJPW Strong Detonation episode.
In the show’s main event, Bullet Club and Team Filthy will align, as Bullet Club’s Jay White and El Phantasmo tag with Team Filthy’s West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) against Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, David Finlay, and Alan Angels.
Also set for Saturday, Christopher Daniels will take on LA Dojo’s The DKC in singles competition.
In Saturday’s opening contest, veteran Kenny King will be in action against Gregory Sharpe.
Strong’s Detonation episodes were taped Sunday, November 20 in Los Angeles at the Vermont Hollywood.
Here is this week’s lineup:
NJPW Strong Detonation, Saturday, December 10, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
Bullet Club (Jay White & El Phantasmo) & Team Filthy’s West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs) vs. Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, David Finlay & Alan Angels
Tonight saw the first round of tapings from NJPW’s recent Detonation tapings in Hollywood, California.
Lucha Libre Rules Match: Rocky Romero & Adrian Quest defeated Atlantis Jr. & Virus
The “Lucha Libre Rules” stipulation meant wrestlers would not be required to tag as long as each team kept with the “one in, one out” rule.
CMLL’s Atlantis Jr. & Virus made their NJPW Strong debuts here. Romero and Virus were in together first. On commentary, Ian Riccaboni talked up Romero and Virus’ past singles bouts. They had a great mat exchange at the top of the match. The crowd was excited to see both Virus and Atlantis Jr., and chanted for both throughout the first few minutes.
After a few minutes of trading holds, Romero stuck his hand out at Virus in a show of respect, but Virus wasn’t interested, waving Romero off and tagging out to Atlantis Jr. The crowd “ooh’d” at that.
Adrian Quest and Atlantis Jr. were in together next. Quest landed a springboard corkscrew press before Atlantis Jr. took him down with a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker.
Later, Atlantis Jr. took out Romero & Quest with a tope suicida. Virus and Atlantis double-teamed both Quest and then Romero in the ring for a while. The five-minute call sounded when Romero made a comeback and tried laying in his Forever Clotheslines on Virus, who cut him off after just two clotheslines.
Quest made the save for Romero and earned a two after landing a standing shooting star press. Virus answered with hard chops and a short jab to lay Quest out. Romero hit Sliced Bread for two. Atlantis Jr. and Quest got into it next. Atlantis Jr. landed a nice dropkick before Quest answered back with a spinning back suplex. Atlantis rolled to the floor and Quest followed him out with a somersault senton, crashing onto Atlantis.
Virus scored a close two with a snap powerslam. Romero responded with a rewind kick. The two went back and forth teasing finishes before Romero cradled Virus for a sudden three-count. Romero & Quest score the win in just over ten minutes. Virus was very good, and Atlantis Jr. showed tons of charisma and maturity despite being just 24 years old. The in-house crowd enjoyed this one.
Homicide defeated Danny Limelight
This was sold as a grudge match because Team Filthy’s Danny Limelight used to be a member of LAX with Homicide before turning his back on the group.
Just before the match got underway, Limelight got into Homicide’s face and called him a hater. When Homicide beat “Filthy” Tom Lawlor on Strong a few weeks ago, Limelight helped Lawlor out and in a promo after the match, Limelight said Homicide is just jealous.
Homicide went right after Limelight, repeatedly shoulderbutting him in the corner and hitting him with a cutter before taking Limelight onto the floor for a ringside beating. Homicide threw Limelight over the guardrail into the first row. He rolled back into the ring to break the ref’s ring-out count, but when he came back out, Limelight caught him off guard with a blockbuster from off the guardrail.
Back in the ring, Limelight shared words with fans before landing a nice diving crossbody press. Homicide answered with a front suplex. Limelight landed a short double-stomp to the back of Homicide’s head.
The crowd enjoyed giving Limelight a hard time. They booed when he went for the Eddy Guerrero-style three vertical suplexes in a row. When Limelight went to the top rope for another attack, the “Radioactive Papi ” paused to showboat for the crowd, which allowed Homicide to recover, follow Limelight to the top, and superplex him off the ropes.
Limelight would later flip Homicide the bird, and Homicide’s response was to bite Limelight’s finger before spitting out a chunk of something. The announcers thought it was a fingernail. Homicide would then shove Limelight against the ropes and stick a fish hook in his mouth while biting his forehead. The crowd loved it and would later start chanting “Danny P*to!”
When the ten-minute call sounded, Limelight landed a Pelé kick before catching Homicide with a springboard tornado DDT. Limelight would go for another one moments later, but Homicide landed the Cop Killer and picked up the win in just over ten minutes.
Afterwards, Homicide looked like he was ready to enact some punishment on Limelight as he circled the ring looking for weapons. He found a bucket, a suitcase, a plastic bin and other pro wrestling booty under the ring and tossed it all inside. Just as Homicide was about to lay into Limelight, Bobby Fish appeared from out of nowhere and attacked Homicide. He threw a few knees before launching him with an exploder suplex into the ropes. The former IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion grabbed the mic and said the enemy of his friends (like Tom Lawlor) are his enemy. He said that he and Team Filthy “have some work to do,” and that the NJPW Strong locker room should be worried about that.
*****
Backstage, Emily Mae interviewed the NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Champions Motor City Machine Guns about their upcoming title defense against Stray Dog Army. Both Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley explained that they’d been all over the world and spent their time making their names on “the blue mat” (NJPW) and in CMLL, IMPACT and elsewhere. Sabin said the only way Stray Dog Army would take the titles would be when they pried them from MCMG’s cold dead fingers.
“Rock Hard” Juice Robinson defeated Blake Christian
Christian darted at Robinson when the bell rang, but Robinson immediately rolled out of the ring to avoid any contact. Christian would chase Robinson to the other side of the ring and again Robinson scurried away. It was on the third try that Christian was able to catch Robinson with a tope suicida on the floor before throwing him back into the ring.
When Christian went for a moonsault off the apron, Robinson caught him in mid-air, then dropped him throat-first across the guardrail with Snake Eyes. Robinson then charged at Christian, but Christian moved and Robinson crashed shoulder-first into the ring post. Christian would immediately capitalize, targeting Robinson’s shoulder. He used an armbreaker over the guardrail before simply wrenching on Robinson’s shoulder as it was stuck in between the rails. Referee Jeremy Marcus had to step down onto the floor and yell at Christian to force him back into the ring.
Back in the ring, Christian came off the ropes but Robinson caught him with a tilt-a-whirl slam before putting him down with a spinebuster for two. He crushed Christian with a heavy senton next, then stomped away at Christian in the corner before connecting with a running cannonball. Five minutes had passed by this point. The crowd chanted “Let’s go, Juicy!”
Christian came back and took Robinson out with a springboard forearm. The energy in the crowd would die down when Christian would return offense, who slowly became more pro-Juice as this match went on.
Christian landed a Rob Van Dam-style Rolling Thunder splash on the apron before doing a Sabu-style Arabian Press onto the floor. The crowd started chanting “f*ck you, Blake!”
Back in the ring, Christian landed a rolling single-arm DDT before locking in a Fujiwara armbar on Robinson’s injured shoulder. Robinson sold like his arm was about to be ripped out of its socket.
Robinson was able to catch Christian with his Left Hand of God, but when he ran at Christian in the corner for a lariat, Christian deflected and kicked Robinson in the injured arm. The crowd was fully behind Robinson. Christian then went for a victory roll, but Robinson reversed the pinfall and held onto the ropes for extra leverage, which he used for the win. Robinson quickly escaped the ring and ran to the back whilst flipping the double bird to the crowd. The crowd kept chanting “Juice!” as the show finally wrapped.
Final thoughts:
I enjoy the more eclectic episodes of NJPW Strong, like tonight’s episode. The opener was a solid, fast-paced bout with new faces for the show. Hopefully NJPW Strong shows in Los Angeles will become a regular destination for more CMLL stars.
Homicide vs. Danny Limelight was good as well, and the Bobby Fish appearance was a total surprise. He’s someone who’d fit in perfectly with the current crop on Strong.
The main event between Juice Robinson and Blake Christian was good as well, but the most interesting part of the match was how positive the crowd reacted to Robinson, who was doing his best to play heel to Christian’s white-bread babyface role. The Hollywood crowd reacts similarly to Jay White also; no matter how bad or nasty they act in the ring, Bullet Club’s Robinson & White seem to always get the hero treatment.
NJPW of America has revealed the lineup for Nemesis.
The Strong tapings will take place on Sunday, December 11 from The Vermont Hollywood in Hollywood, California. Seven matches have been confirmed for the show.
Hikuleo will team with Alan Angels to take on Bullet Club’s Jay White and El Phantasmo. The match will take place just three days before Hikuleo challenges Karl Anderson for the NEVER Openweight Championship on December 14 from the Sendai Sunplaza Hall in Miyagi, Japan.
This will be Angels’ fourth match with NJPW after having debuted for the promotion at Ignition in June. It will be his second straight event teaming with Hikuleo and facing members of Bullet Club as well. At Detonation on November 20, Angels, Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, and David Finlay defeated Jay White, ELP, and Team Filthy’s West Coast Wrecking Crew.
NJPW Strong’s Detonation series kicks off this Saturday with a Juice Robinson vs. Blake Christian headliner.
In Saturday’s main event, Bullet Club’s Robinson takes on Strong regular Christian in a singles bout. Christian attacked Robinson on last week’s episode after Robinson took on Jake Something.
In another singles bout set for Saturday, former ROH World Champion Homicide will face Team Filthy’s Danny Limelight.
A unique tag team match will kick off Saturday’s episode, as Rocky Romero and Adrian Quest take on Atlantis Jr. and Virus under lucha rules where partners can enter without tags as long as their teammate has left the ring.
Strong’s Detonation episodes were taped Sunday, November 20 in Los Angeles.
Here is Saturday’s lineup:
NJPW Strong, Saturday, December 3, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW Strong —
Juice Robinson vs. Blake Christian
Homicide vs. Danny Limelight
Lucha Rules tag match: Rocky Romero & Adrian Quest vs. Atlantis Jr. & Virus
Saturday’s show saw the final set of matches from NJPW’s Showdown tapings in Hollywood, California, headlined by a non-title match between NJPW Strong Champion Fred Rosser and
Aussie Open (Kyler Fletcher & Mark Davis) defeated Jakob Austin Young & Gregory Sharpe
We saw Young & Sharpe previously on this year’s Strong tapings from North Carolina.
Aussie Open ambushed Young & Sharpe before the bell sounded. After throwing them to the floor, Fletcher & Davis smashed their opponents into each other spinefirst before tossing them aside.
Later, back in the ring, Sharpe answered back with a few elbows of his own, plus one high roundhouse kick to Davis’ head. The fans in attendance booed Sharpe’s comeback despite he and Young clearly being designated as the babyface team. Aussie Open seem to be that well liked.
After putting Fletcher down with La Mistica, Sharpe crawled to his corner and tagged out to Young who lit Fletcher up with chops before catching him in a standing crucifix submission.
Sharpe later tagged back in and landed a flying crossbody press onto both of Aussie Open. The crowd began to warm to the new faces from this point on.
Aussie Open shifted the momentum moments later, catching Sharpe in an assisted GTS before laying him out with a double-team cutter maneuver, but Sharpe was able to kick out at two.
The finish saw Aussie Open put Sharpe away after hitting their Coriolis finisher.
Juice Robinson defeated Jake Something
Something made his return to a New Japan Strong ring after prior appearances this year.
He and Robinson had a good big man match. Early on, Robinson landed on Something with a sandbag of a senton.
At around five minutes after Robinson had been more or less in control of things, Something was able to explode out of the corner and take Robinson out with front bodypress before spearing him in the corner. He would then do a running tope to the floor onto Robinson. Something is a large dude, so this was extra impressive. Something scored a two-count back in the ring with a falcon arrow.
Robinson was able to headbutt Something on the top rope and take him down with a super Frankensteiner before blasting him with a shotgun dropkick that sent Something flying into the corner. Robinson would then attempt his signature cannonball in the corner, but Something caught Robinson mid-air and laid him out with a Liger bomb for two.
Robinson caught Something in a schoolboy and pulled on Something’s tights for leverage. The Hollywood crowd got a full view of Something’s rear end before he could kick out.
The two collided into each other with simultaneous lariats. Robinson connected with his Left Hand of God, but Something didn’t go down. The ten-minute call sounded. In the end, Robinson was able to flatten Something out with an inverted sit-out death valley bomb for the win.
After the match, Blake Christian appeared. While Robinson wasn’t paying attention, Christian nailed him with a springboard dropkick before diving over the ropes onto the floor to beat on Robinson some more.
Backstage, Robinson addressed Christian’s attack. He said it shouldn’t be “All Heart” Blake Christian but “sh*t-for-brains” because only someone extremely stupid would have went after him. He asked if Christian had seen what he had done to Ren Narita recently when Narita “bit off more than he could chew.” Robinson was referring to when he left Narita lying in a pool of blood after a hardcore match earlier this year. Robinson and Christian will take each other on in next week’s main event.
IWGP World Champion Jay White defeated NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser in a non-title match
This was a non-title match between Strong Openweight champion Rosser and IWGP World Heavyweight champion White.
The crowd in attendance sounded happy to see White and did a noisy “too sweet!” chant for him. Rosser appropriated it and did some “too sweet” gesturing of his own which White didn’t like so he slapped Rosser in the face before sliding out of the ring to gather himself. When Rosser chased after him, White grabbed onto Rosser’s ankles and dragged him to the floor.
Back in the ring, White held Rosser in a side headlock. Rosser would try to reverse White’s weight and leverage, but White was always able to keep Rosser neutralized in a heavy side headlock.
Rosser was later able to catch White coming off the ropes with a powerslam before decking him with a lariat that sent both men flying over the top to the floor. Rosser then jumped the barricade to celebrate with the fans. He even did the Prime Time Players dance with someone in the front row. How can you not like this guy?
Rosser stood White against the ring post on the floor and locked him in a crossface chicken wing, using some the ring post for some extra leverage.
White was able to bring Rosser down with a stun gun across the ropes before whipping him into the barricade. White methodically began picking Rosser apart. He would piece him up with short strikes mixed in with some illegal shots. Once, he stuck both thumbs into Rosser’s eyeballs and squeezed until referee Jeremy Marcus forced White to break.
At around this point, the crowd began chanting “Thank you, Jay!” though I’m not exactly sure why. Even the announcers sounded mildly confused.
Rosser kept eating more shots from White, but after a while, he was shouting for White to hit him some more. Rosser threw a big headbutt and took White off his feet with a hard two-handed chop.
White would drop Rosser with a Bladebuster suplex. Later, when White had Rosser back to his feet, he continued chopping him. Rosser insisted on eating more. He even locked his arms behind the ropes and wore a smile on his face, offering his chest to White as a blank canvas for chopping. The Strong Openweight champion shouted “HIT ME!” at White who laid in hard chops. Rosser absorbed all of them like they were nothing. He then stormed out of the corner and chased White with a few chops of his own until the crafty White took Rosser down with a sudden flatliner, flattening Rosser from out of nowhere.
White put Rosser down with a big Russian suplex for two. He then went for a half-nelson suplex, but Rosser escaped to the ring apron, making it difficult for White to fully lock in the hold. White then attempted the half-and-half on the apron, but Rosser was able to reverse it into his signature falling backdrop onto the apron, dropping White backfirst onto the stiffest part of the ring.
Despite White feeling the pain of the apron backdrop, he was still able to muster up enough strength to launch Rosser with the half nelson suplex, drilling Rosser onto the back of his head. 15 minutes had passed at this point.
White went for the Bladerunner, but Rosser countered and took White out with a fireman’s carry gutbuster. He fought to lock White in the crossface chicken wing over the next couple minutes, even headbutting White in the shoulder to lock in the hold more deeply.
Marcus began checking to see if White could continue. If White’s arm fell three times, the match would be over. When White resisted his arm going down for a third time, Marcus signaled to the timekeeper that White was not out, but in the split second he had his back turned, White threw a mule kick between Rosser’s legs, connecting with a hard low blow that Marcus didn’t see.
White went to finish Rosser off with the Bladerunner, but then, suddenly, Rosser slipped away and locked White right back into the chicken wing, this time with Rosser also locking White into a body scissors so that had a harder time escaping. The crowd was very hot at this point.
White first went to grab the ropes for a full break, but suddenly, within another split second, White brought Rosser down with the Bladerunner to win the match.
Afterward, White grabbed the mic. He claimed that he was responsible for NJPW Strong being around which meant he could have easily had the right to challenge for Rosser’s Openweight title. But White said that he had his hands full at the moment being the IWGP World Champion. So instead, he, “The Father of NJPW Strong,” would choose the champion’s next opponent. He then explained that he had recently made a deal with former Openweight champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor, and said that per Lawlor’s request, Rosser’s next title match would be against Team Filthy’s JR Kratos.
Kratos then appeared from backstage. He walked to the ring, took Rosser’s beaten body, and deadlift suplexed him before the end of the broadcast.
Final thoughts:
Tonight’s main event really felt like a big deal. Both Rosser and White were excellent and the last few minutes of this were very good. The crowd was all in toward the end. White and Rosser wrestle very different styles but together, they were like peanut butter & jelly. I’m curious to see how this match would have gotten over if a) one or both titles were on the line and b) if this had taken place in Japan. I anticipate a rematch sometime down the road, maybe next year, and that should be great.
It will be IWGP World Heavyweight Champion vs. NJPW Strong Openweight Champion in the main event of this week’s NJPW Strong.
In a non-title affair, IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Jay White takes on Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser in the headliner of Saturday’s NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown episode.
Also announced for Saturday, Bullet Club’s Juice Robinson will face Jake Something in another singles bout.
In Saturday’s opener, Aussie Open’s Kyle Fletcher and Mark Davis of The United Empire will take on Greg Sharpe and Jakob Austin Young.
Here is the full card for Saturday’s episode:
NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown, Saturday, November 26, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Jay White vs. NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Fred Rosser in a non-title bout
Juice Robinson vs. Jake Something
Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis of The United Empire) vs. Greg Sharpe & Jakob Austin Young
Below are spoilers from Sunday’s NJPW Strong: Detonation taping held in Los Angeles.
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Former AEW, NXT, and ROH talent Bobby Fish returned to NJPW at Sunday’s Detonation taping, kicking off a feud with Homicide at the event.
Fish last appeared for NJPW on joint NJPW-ROH shows in 2017, but also had a run for the company’s main unit in Japan, twice holding the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team titles.
In addition to Fish’s return, both the Strong Openweight and Strong Openweight Tag Team titles were defended at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles.
Here are results from the taping, courtesy of PW Insider:
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Fred Rosser defeated JR Kratos to retain the title (Peter Avalon was set up as Rosser’s next title challenger with a post-match angle.)
Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, David Finlay & Alan Angels defeated Jay White, El Phantasmo, Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
Rocky Romero & Adrian Quest defeated Atlantis Jr. & Virus
NJPW Strong Openweight Tag Team Championship: Motor City Machine Guns (Chris Sabin & Alex Shelley) defeated Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown & Misterioso) to retain the titles
Bobby Fish defeated Kevin Blackwood (Homicide attacked Fish after the match)
Tonight was the third week of action from NJPW’s Detonation tapings in Hollywood, California. This was another solid episode from NJPW Strong with this week’s main event well worth going out of your way to check out.
Peter Avalon defeated Keita via submission
Avalon got on the mic to address the crowd. saying that he didn’t just want to be the biggest man in NJPW Strong or in AEW, but the biggest man, period. He sounded meaner and more serious in his promo, which feels more appropriate for him here.
When Keita arrived, Avalon offered him the microphone for a rebuttal. Just as Keita was about to speak, Avalon caught him with a sudden enzuigiri kick to the back of the head.
Avalon spiked Keita with a death valley bomb as soon as the bell rang but couldn’t put him away. He went for a half crab immediately — the move he submitted Keita with the last time they wrestled.
Keita sent Avalon over the ropes to the floor and landed on him with a tope suicida. This was fast action from the get-go with lots of big spots early on with the crowd chanting for Keita during this.
Avalon would lock him into a cross facelock before putting him down with a back suplex for two. He later hit a suicide dive of his own later on, following it up with a slingshot knee drop into the ring on Keita.
Keita hit “Key to the City,” a tornado suplex, suddenly, for two. In the end, they traded submission holds until Avalon caught Keita in the Golden Arch single-leg crab for the win.
Bullet Club (El Phantasmo & Chris Bey) defeated Mascara Dorada & Blake Christian
“Rock Hard” Juice Robinson joined Ian Riccaboni & Alex Koslov on commentary for this match.
This was ten minutes of non-stop action.
Bey and Christian started things off and exchanged flashy offense up front. El Phantasmo and Dorada were in next and Dorada showed off an impressive rope walk dropkick. No one else moves like he does on the ropes.
He and Phantasmo had a cool exchange while they were both tightrope walking while both holding Christian & Bey by the arms. They started trading chops while balancing on the same top rope. Dorada got the better of the exchange and knocked Phantasmo to the floor.
Christian hit an Arabian press to the floor onto the three others in the match. He would later launch Dorada over the ropes onto Bullet Club with a back body drop.
Christian scored a C4 off the second rope to Bey for a close two count. Dorada landed a springboard elbow drop on Bey for another two.
When the ten minute call sounded, Robinson, who was near ringside on commentary, stood up to flip off Christian, who was about to do something to Bey off the top rope. This caught Christian off guard which gave Bey a chance to fight back and eventually avoid any damage.
The finish came soon after when Robinson shoved Christian off the top rope straight into a cutter from Bey, leading to Bullet Club taking the victory.
Homicide defeated “Filthy” Tom Lawlor
This was really good with the crowd split between both men.
They stayed in a collar-and-elbow tie-up for about thirty seconds before they first broke. Lawlor used a waistlock takedown to ground Homicide, but it didn’t last for long. Homicide had an answer for anything Lawlor was offering up.
They traded hard slaps and chops in the corner intermittently. Lawlor kept attacking with a variety of submissions from leg locks to arm locks and anything in between. Homicide eventually caught Lawlor in an STF, but Lawlor reversed it into a sleeper.
They ended up rolling from the ring down onto the floor where they finally were broken up. Homicide drilled Lawlor with a piledriver on the floor. When he went for another, Lawlor escaped and kicked him in the head. They took until the ref’s count of 19 to get back into the ring. They unloaded hard slaps on their knees. Homicide did some biting, later taking out a fork and sticking it into the corner turnbuckle post for safe keeping.
Lawlor caught Homicide with a giant one-armed uranage slam, like Takeshi Rikio’s MUSO finisher, which got a two count.
Lawlor had Homicide locked in a front face lock for a while, but Homicide escaped. Lawlor would slap on another sleeper, but Homicide bit his way out of it, chomping down on Filthy’s fingers to break the hold.
In the end, Homicide went for the Cop Killer, but Lawlor backflipped out of it before locking him in a sleeper once more. Homicide rolled forward to shake Lawlor off his back and then caught him in stride with a brutal running lariat, laying him out completely. You could see the sweat explode off Lawlor’s chest. Homicide would score the upset win over the former STRONG Openweight champion.
Afterwards, Team Filthy’s Danny Limelight came out to protect Lawlor from any post-match fork attacks and to help Lawlor to the back. Limelight and Homicide had words, though, as they were both in LAX together in the past.
Backstage, Limelight talked about the history between the two and how he had watched both Lawlor and Homicide wrestle in wars, but Limelight implied that Homicide went over the line, so to speak, when he went to attack Lawlor with a fork. He put over Lawlor and listed his past accomplishments, accusing Homicide of taking the Team Filthy beef personal.
Limelight said “Filthy” Tom had had his back for over two years, so then if Homicide still had a problem, they could settle it “like they do in New York” and then put up his fists. Limelight continued to warn Homicide: “It’s nothin’ personal. It’s just filthy business.”
NJPW is returning to The Vermont Hollywood for their final taping of the year.
The company announced on Tuesday they will be holding their final tapings of 2022 on December 11. Those announced for the tapings include Jay White, Juice Robinson, ELP, Eddie Kingston, Roppongi Vice, Fred Rosser, and Mascara Dorada.
Tickets will go on sale this Friday, November 18, at 10 am PST.
NJPW’s next taping, titled Detonation, will take place this Sunday, November 20, also at the Vermont Hollywood. Here is the full card:
NJPW Strong title: Fred Rosser defends against JR Kratos
NJPW Strong Tag Team titles: Motor City Machine Guns defend against Stray Dog Army (Barrett Brown and Misterioso)
Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, Alan Angels, and David Finlay vs. Jay White, ELP, and the West Coast Wrecking Crew
Lucha libre rules: Rocky Romero and Adrian Quest vs. Atlantis Jr. and Virus
Bad Dude Tito vs. KENTA
Mascara Dorada and Lince Dorado vs. Cody Chhun and Guillermo Rosas
A singles match between a former NJPW Strong Openweight Champion and a former ROH World Champion headlines Saturday’s NJPW Strong episode.
In the main event, former Strong Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor takes on former ROH World Champion Homicide in singles competition. The bout will be the first ever singles meeting between Homicide and Lawlor.
In another match for Saturday, Mascara Dorada teams with Blake Christian against the Bullet Club squad of El Phantasmo and Chris Bey. Dorada and Christian team again after joining forces on Strong’s Autumn Action episodes.
In Saturday’s opening contest, Peter Avalon faces Keita Murray.
Strong’s New Japan Showdown episodes were taped on October 16 at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles.
Saturday’s lineup:
NJPW Strong: New Japan Showdown, Saturday, November 19, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —
“Filthy” Tom Lawlor vs. Homicide
Mascara Dorada & Blake Christian vs. Bullet Club (El Phantasmo & Chris Bey)