Hiroshi Tanahashi, Jay White set for tag team match at NJPW Strong Ignition

NJPW has announced the first match for the Ignition taping of Strong in Los Angeles on June 19. 

In tag team action, Hiroshi Tanahashi and Yuya Uemura will face Bullet Club’s Jay White and Hikuleo. The match was announced Tuesday evening. 

White and Hikuleo teamed at Capital Collision earlier this month, defeating Kazuchika Okada and Rocky Romero in a tag bout in Washington, DC. At the same show, Tanahashi lost the IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship to Juice Robinson in a four-way match also involving Jon Moxley and Will Ospreay.

White is currently scheduled to challenge Kazuchika Okada for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship at Dominion in Osaka on Sunday, June 12. 

Ignition will be taped at the Vermont Hollywood, venue, which has quickly become Strong’s home base since their first visit there last December. 

NJPW Strong: Ignition, Sunday, June 19 —

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi & Yuya Uemura vs. Jay White & Hikuleo

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

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

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

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

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

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

Here is the lineup for this week’s Strong:

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

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

NJPW Strong announces High Alert taping for July

NJPW is returning to Charlotte, North Carolina for the first time since 2019.

The promotion announced an NJPW Strong taping titled “High Alert” for the Grady Cole Center in Charlotte on Sunday, July 24. 

No talent has been advertised for the event to this point. 

Tickets for the show will go on sale this Friday, May 27 at 12 p.m. Eastern time, with ticket prices ranging from $25-$149.

NJPW has already announced its Ignition taping for Los Angeles at the Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles on Sunday, June 19. 

NJPW wrote about High Alert: 

July 24 will see NJPW STRONG come to the Grady Cole Center in Charlotte North Carolina for High Alert tapings. The event will see NJPW’s first appearance in the Grady Cole since New Beginning 2019, as the very best in pure professional wrestling comes to the heartland of pro-wrestling in Charlotte.

Tickets go on sale on Friday May 27 for what is sure to be a stacked night of action: stay tuned for updates on the lineup and matches you can expect to see!

NJPW Strong results: United Empire six-man tag match

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Final thoughts:

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

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

Three matches announced for this week’s NJPW Strong episode

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

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

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

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

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

Here is the lineup for this week’s show: 

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

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

NJPW Strong Collision in Philadelphia spoilers: Openweight title match

NJPW taped the Collision in Philadelphia episodes of Strong on Sunday at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia. 

The show was headlined by Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson, and also featured an NJPW Strong Openweight Championship match with Tom Lawlor defending against Fred Rosser, with Rosser being forced to leave NJPW if he lost. 

Below are results and spoilers from the event. Thanks to Liam Renner.

NJPW Strong: Collision in Philadelphia results —

  • Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Chris Dickinson
  • Tanahashi won by pinfall with the High Fly Flow.

  • Jay White, Juice Robinson, Hikuleo, Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows defeated Tomohiro Ishii, Rocky Romero, Mascara Dorada, Chuck Taylor & Ren Narita
  • Hikuleo pinned Romero after a chokeslam.

  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Fred Rosser defeated “Filthy” Tom Lawlor to win the title
  • Rosser won by submission with a chicken wing. He got a “thank you grandpa” chant going for his 87 year-old grandfather who was in attendance. 

  • Minoru Suzuki defeated Tony Deppen
  • Suzuki won by pinfall after the Gotch-style piledriver.

  • Killer Kross defeated Yuya Uemura
  • Kross won by referee stoppage after a series of forearms to the back of the head.

  • Will Ospreay defeated Homicide
  • Ospreay won by pinfall after hitting a Stormbreaker.

  • Jeff Cobb defeated Willie Mack
  • Cobb pinned Mack with a roll-up.

  • Great-O-Khan, Kyle Fletcher, Mark Davis & Aaron Henare defeated JONAH, Shane Haste, Mikey Nicholls & Bad Dude Tito
  • Fletcher pinned Tito after a suplex. 

  • David Finlay defeated Danny Limelight
  • Finlay pinned Limelight after hitting a Trash Panda brainbuster on the knee. 

  • Karl Fredericks defeated QT Marshall
  • Fredericks pinned Marshall after hitting his MD DDT. The Factory attacked Fredericks after the match, but a hooded figure made the save. The masked man revealed himself to be Christopher Daniels. 

  • Ariya Daivari defeated Delirious
  • Daivari won with his hammerlock lariat. 

  • JR Kratos, Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson defeated Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC

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.

Title match added to NJPW Strong Collision in Philadelphia

An Openweight Championship match has been added to Sunday’s NJPW Strong: Collision in Philadelphia taping. 

“Filthy” Tom Lawlor will defend the Strong Openweight title against Fred Rosser on the show in a match announced late Friday. If Rosser loses, he must leave NJPW Strong. 

Thirteen matches are now official for Sunday’s taping at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia. The announced card: 

  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor vs. Fred Rosser (If Rosser loses, he must leave NJPW Strong)
  • Will Ospreay vs. Homicide
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Tony Deppen
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson
  • Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. JR Kratos, Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
  • Killer Kross vs. Yuya Uemura
  • David Finlay vs. Danny Limelight
  • QT Marshall vs. Karl Fredericks
  • Brody King vs. Jake Something
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Willie Mack
  • Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis vs. JONAH, Bad Dude Tito, Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls
  • Tomohiro Ishii, Rocky Romero, Mascara Dorada, Ren Narita & Chuck Taylor vs. Jay White, Juice Robinson, Karl Anderson, Doc Gallows & Hikuleo
  • Delirious vs. Ariya Daivari

Brody King on joining AEW, changes in Ring of Honor, House of Black creation

Ahead of this weekend’s NJPW Strong tapings for Capital Collision in Washington D.C and Collision in Pennsylvania, I spoke with Brody King who takes on Minoru Suzuki Saturday and Jake Something on Sunday.

King had been signed exclusively to Ring of Honor since 2018. But in October 2021, they announced that following last December’s Final Battle, they would be taking a hiatus. They then released everyone from their contracts, including King.

Then on January 12th of this year, King made his AEW debut, joining Malakai Black in what would become known as the House of Black.

In our 32-minute talk you can watch above, we touched on the changes in ROH, why he signed with AEW and plenty more.

The writing on the wall with ROH

“I kinda saw the writing on the wall. They weren’t renewing any contract that were coming up and they weren’t discussing it with anybody. My contract was going to be renegotiated in December and it was about October and they hadn’t said anything to me and I know a few others that they hadn’t said anything to. I was like, ‘That seems strange that they have all these big players that they would probably want to keep with their deals coming and nobody is discussing it with them, so…’ 

I feel like maybe a lot of people wanted to pretend like that wasn’t the case, but if you look at it from a business standpoint, that’s probably not a good sign, especially since we were doing shows with crowds again. The crowds weren’t great and there’s only so much you can do with a big roster with a lot of money and not a lot of people in the crowd.”

The seeds of House of Black idea planted prior to AEW

“When the news for Ring of Honor broke, I feel like Malakai and I had already been discussing this House of Black dream scenario like ‘If it could happen…’ I think we were already discussing possibly trying to set the groundwork for it, so it was very much in the works already. We had already been discussing the what ifs and balancing ideas.

I talked to Tony (Khan) very shortly after the news from Ring of Honor broke and he invited me out to a couple of the shows. We discussed things and that’s when the whole House of Black idea really came into fruition. It seemed like a good fit and everything fell into place, so I was very fortunate that I kind of had a plan already and it was just an easier decision.”

Dealing with jealousy not being in AEW

“My perception was that (AEW) was a good alternative to something like WWE and it was an alternative that I liked a lot more. It fit much more to my style and to my beliefs in wrestling and everything in between. A lot of my friends were some of the people that started it like MJF, Jungle Boy, Darby Allin. All these guys were starting the company while I was starting in Ring of Honor. I would be lying if there wasn’t a little bit of jealousy once I started seeing that blow up. And it was just like ‘Man, I wish I was over there with those guys.’ I kept in contact with them throughout the years and they welcomed me with open arms.”

Creative collaboration for the House of Black

“Everything with the House of Black is pretty much a collaboration. Usually one of us will come to the table with an idea and we all kinda just riff off of that and kinda make something out of that. Everyone kinda gives what they think they should do and we kinda take pieces from all of it and make the whole thing. It’s really cool, because it doesn’t feel like one person is in control of the whole thing. Obviously Malakai has a lot more experience and he has years in wrestling to guide all of our ideas and I feel like without him, it might not be as polished as it would be.”

The future of the new Ring of Honor

“I would like to see it become what it once was. It just needs the diehard fans back. It needs people to give their energy to the performers in the ring. If it’s a super indie, that’s awesome — like, if it travels around to different cities when there’s pay-per-views or whatever. That’s cool. If it’s just a traveling show or if it’s a TV product, that’s awesome as well. But I think it’s a good opportunity to give a lot of younger talent a look that’s just not only Dark or Dark Elevation. They can really go out there and show what they have or if there are some undercard guys on AEW that need to really get out in front of a crowd and test some stuff out, then maybe Ring of Honor is a good opportunity for that as well. I feel there is a lot to be done with it. “

Two matches added to NJPW Strong Collision in Philadelphia

Two new matches are set for Sunday’s NJPW Strong Collision in Philadelphia taping.

In a 10-man tag, Tomohiro Ishii, Rocky Romero, Mascara Dorada, Ren Narita, and AEW’s Chuck Taylor will face Bullet Club’s Jay White, Juice Robinson, Karl Anderson, Doc Gallows, and Hikuleo. 

In the other new match announced, former ROH booker Delirious will face Ariya Daivari in singles competition. 

Twelve matches are now official for Sunday’s taping, which comes the day after Saturday’s Capital Collision pay-per-view event in Washington DC. 

Here is Sunday’s lineup: 

NJPW Strong Collision in Philadelphia, Sunday, May 15 —

  • Will Ospreay vs. Homicide
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Tony Deppen
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson
  • Alex Coughlin, Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. JR Kratos, Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
  • Killer Kross vs. Yuya Uemura
  • David Finlay vs. Danny Limelight
  • QT Marshall vs. Karl Fredericks
  • Brody King vs. Jake Something
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Willie Mack
  • Great-O-Khan, Aaron Henare, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis vs. JONAH, Bad Dude Tito, Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls
  • Tomohiro Ishii, Rocky Romero, Mascara Dorada, Ren Narita & Chuck Taylor vs. Jay White, Juice Robinson, Karl Anderson, Doc Gallows & Hikuleo
  • Delirious vs. Ariya Daivari

NJPW Strong results: Team Filthy six-man tag

Bullet Club (Hikuleo & Chris Bey) Stray Dog Army (Bateman & Barrett Brown)

Brown and Bey were first for their teams. They locked up but neither could gain the upper hand. After a stalemate, Bey threw up the Too Sweet gesture and asked if Brown wanted in Bullet Club. Brown flipped him off instead. From here, they kicked their exchange into full gear, running the ropes, trading headscissors and chops.

Later, the two taller teammates, Bateman and Hikuleo, squared off. Bateman tried chopping Hikuleo down with elbows, but Hikuleo wouldn’t budge. He sent Bateman flying with a shoulder block. When the match spilled to the floor, Hikuleo hoisted Bateman up and dropped him throat-first into the guardrail with snake eyes.

Bey tagged himself in back in the ring. Hikuleo looked annoyed by that, continuing the storyline between Hikuleo and the Bullet Club.

Bey used a variety of submissions on Bateman, taking the taller Bateman off his feet and neutralizing him in the center of the ring. When the ten-minute call sounded, Bateman was able to slam Bey into the corner post, breaking a sleeper, and eventually tagged out to a fresh Barrett Brown, who cleaned house.

Hikuleo and Bateman got into it a few moments later. Chris Bey low bridged Bateman over the ropes onto the floor, then dived onto him with a tope con giro. In the ring, Brown tried coming off the top rope, but Hikuleo shut it down. He finished Brown off with a massive chokeslam to pick up the win for Bullet Club.

Bey tried celebrating with Hikuleo after the match, but the big man wasn’t having it as he was still sore over G.O.D.’s fresh removal from Bullet Club.

JONAH defeated Blake Christian

Speaking of JONAH, the “Top Dog” just recently left IMPACT Wrestling.

Christian went in for a double-leg early on, but JONAH peeled Christian off and placed him on the apron. Back in the ring, Christian tried flipping and weaving out of JONAH’s way in an attempt to find an opening or at least tire JONAH out, but to no avail. JONAH press slammed Christian, then dropped him onto the guardrail before throwing him back in the ring for more punishment.

Chrisitian came back and connected with a tornado DDT before diving onto JONAH with a Fosbury Flop to the floor. No luck on the Flop, though, since JONAH caught him mid-air. Christian did, however, get himself out of the pickle by using yet another swinging DDT on JONAH, this time onto the floor. Christian then scored a nearfall with a springboard 450. Christian flew off the ropes again, but this time JONAH caught him flush with a cross body-block. He then power bombed Christian onto the Lion Mark logo, then squashed him with the Bam Bam Bigelow-style diving splash for an emphatic finish, which woke up the crowd.

Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor, Royce Isaacs & JR Kratos) defeated Fred Rosser, Alex Coughlin and The DKC

“Why are they so small?!” Kevin Kelly exclaimed. He was referring to Team Filthy, who decided to wear tiny sombreros to the ring for this match. The Three Filthy Amigos.

Coughlin and Kratos got into each other’s faces during the ring announcements before the match. When things got underway, it looked as though Rosser and Isaacs would start the match off for their teams, but before they could lock up, JR Kratos dashed to the opposite corner and ambushed Coughlin. Rosser saw what happened, so instead of locking up with Isaacs, he enacted some tit for tat action and bashed “Filthy” Tom off the apron. The match immediately turned into a scene of bedlam, with bodies flying everywhere, both in and out of the ring.

When the match settled back into the ring, Coughlin laid Isaacs out with a gutwrench suplex. Coughlin tagged out to Rosser, who tenderized Isaacs with a series of forearms, but Isaacs returned fire with a capture suplex. He tagged Lawlor into the match next. Lawlor did the Filthy Strut before working Rosser over in the corner. Team Filthy would take turns beating on Rosser, each tagging in and out. Rosser was able to muscle out of the blue corner, lay Lawlor and Isaacs out with a double lariat, and finally tag out to the DKC.

DKC was fired up when he got back into the ring, but Kratos steamrolled him within seconds, total kibosh. He flattened the DKC with a lariat, and later launched him with a vertical suplex. Lawlor and Isaacs would come into the ring and Team Filthy posed over a dazed DKC.

Kratos tagged Lawlor in. His plan to take advantage of a helpless DKC backfired when Rosser decided to drag Lawlor out of the ring by his ankles. Rosser planted him with a falling backdrop on the apron after whipping him into the barricade outside the ring.

Back in the ring, Kratos and Coughlin finally had their chance to go at it one-on-one. Coughlin tried lifting Kratos in a fireman’s carry, but no dice. Their fight went onto the floor next, while the DKC chopped up a storm back in the ring. He likes to do a spot where he takes a prone opponent, lies them back-first across his knee, then proceeds to shout “DKC FIRE!” before furiously chopping the opponent in the throat with knife-edged karate chops. He did DKC Fire to both Lawlor and Isaacs, but earned only a two when he pinned Lawlor.

Lawlor came back and slammed the DKC into his team’s corner, but when he and Isaacs went for a double-team gutbuster type move, the DKC slipped out of Isaac’s clutch and Isaacs’ ended up coming face-down onto Lawlor’s knees. The DKC then took Lawlor out with a Liu Kang-style jump kick.

When the DKC went to the top rope, Lawlor climbed up from behind him and slapped on a sleeper. This gave Isaacs a chance to grab the DKC and take him out with a spinning avalanche powerslam for the win.

Right after the match, Fred Rosser got on the mic and said when he challenged Tom Lawlor in Florida for his STRONG Openweight championship, Lawlor just walked away “like a little bitch.” On this night in Texas, he demanded a shot at Lawlor’s title. Lawlor said that his answer again was “no.”

But then Lawlor said he was feeling generous. He asked if Rosser was “feeling ready for primetime,” a subtle dig at Rosser’s time in WWE as part of the Primetime Players tag team. He asked if Rosser would show up, or would he prove to Lawlor that he’s the same guy he was ten years ago. He then offered Rosser a shot at the STRONG Openweight title, with the caveat being he must beat both Royce Isaacs and Isaacs’ tag team partner, Jorel Nelson, in a handicap match at NJPW Strong: Mutiny in Hollywood. Lawlor said he wasn’t worried, though, because he believed that still, even after a handicap match, his answer to Rosser would be “no.”

Final thoughts:

Tonight’s NJPW Strong was solid fare, as usual. It was more focused on storytelling and prolonged angles, like the story between Hikuleo and Bullet Club and the continuation of the Fred Rosser vs. Team Filthy feud.

Next week sees the first episode from NJPW Strong’s Mutiny tapings from Hollywood.

NJPW announces schedule change for this week’s Strong

NJPW has announced a change of plans for this Saturday’s episode of Strong.

Earlier this week, it was announced that this week’s Strong would be a special two-hour episode of the show. Those plans have been scrapped, with it now set to be a standard one-hour edition.

The episode will feature three matches that were taped at NJPW Lonestar Shootout in Dallas during WrestleMania week.

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

  • Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos & Royce Isaacs vs. Fred Rosser, Alex Coughlin & The DKC
  • JONAH vs. Blake Christian
  • Hikuleo & Chris Bey vs. Bateman & Barrett Brown

Content from last month’s Mutiny tapings in Los Angeles was supposed to start airing on the two-hour Strong episode. The three matches will instead air on the Friday, May 13 edition of Strong. That episode is being moved to Friday due to NJPW’s Capital Collision pay-per-view taking place in Washington, D.C. on Saturday, May 14.

The lineup for the May 13 Strong episode is:

NJPW Strong, Friday, May 13, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • Jay White vs. Hikuleo
  • Handicap match: Fred Rosser vs. Royce Isaacs & Jorel Nelson
  • Rocky Romero, Adrian Quest & Alex Coughlin vs. JR Kratos, Black Tiger & Danny Limelight

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Here is this week’s full lineup: 

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

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

NJPW Strong 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 announces Ignition tapings for June

NJPW Strong will be back at its home venue for a night of television tapings this June.

A set of NJPW Strong tapings called “Ignition” will be held at The Vermont Hollywood in Los Angeles, California on Sunday, June 19. The tapings are taking place one week before AEW & NJPW’s Forbidden Door pay-per-view in Chicago.

Jay White, Hikuleo, Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor, and Mascara Dorada are advertised for the Ignition tapings.

Tickets for the tapings will go on sale this Friday at 10 a.m. Pacific time.

NJPW wrote about the tapings:

Since its debut in December 2021, NJPW STRONG has established an incredible home in the Vermont Hollywood, with packed and red hot crowds being a theme through Nemesis, Rivals, and the soon to air Mutiny series.

On Sunday June 19, STRONG returns to the Vermont, with Ignition! Just one week before NJPW’s big stars combine with AEW for Forbidden Door in Chicago’s United Center, the names will be out in force to do battle in Hollywood. With Jay White, Hikuleo, Tom Lawlor, Mascara Dorada and more already confirmed to be in the lineup, what surprises may unfold, and what matches will fans be treated to at Ignition?

Stay tuned for more details, and get the best tickets fast! Tickets go on sale FRIDAY, April 29 at 10 AM Pacific!

NJPW Strong will also be holding tapings in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Sunday, May 15.