Daily Update: NJPW Windy City Riot issues, Google trends, Oscar de la Hoya

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Shinjiro Otani seriously injured, WWE announces UK stadium show

  • Update on Shinjiro Otani, what happened, a review of his career and a look at Zero-1’s biggest show in years.
  • WWE officially announces its Principality Stadium show in Cardiff, Wales, a look back at the biggest UK events for WWE and the ticket demand.
  • Coverage of UFC 273 featuring a potential Hall of Fame fight with Khamzat Chimaev vs. Gilbert Burns, plus the judging in Sterling-Yan, the dominance of Alexander Volkanovski, business notes on the show and match-by-match coverage.
  • Full coverage of NJPW Hyper Battle and the angles leading to the return of New Japan to the Fukuoka Dome, a look back at the first show in that building, plus G1 and Best of the Super Juniors updates
  • Update on WrestleMania Backlash, ticket demand, matches being built, false advertising of Brock Lesnar and more
  • Ratings including rankings, oldest and youngest audience, affect of NBA playoffs, segment-by-segment numbers and comparisons with last year.
  • CMLL Champion of Champions tournament continuing
  • AEW star announces return from major injury
  • Hall of Famer announces the relaunch of his former promotion
  • All Japan Champion Carnival update
  • NOAH Sumo Hall lineups
  • NJPW star finishes up this week and background
  • Scott Hall funeral
  • New wrestling books
  • Biggest indie crowds of the year
  • The Strangler Lewis headlock machine
  • Discovery/Warner merger and AEW
  • NJPW & AEW deal
  • Story behind the debut of Satnam Singh
  • Ticket sales for upcoming AEW & WWE shows
  • International TV ratings
  • Streaming numbers for the major stuff of the past week
  • Cain Velasquez case update
  • UFC adds 2016 Fight of the Year to Hall of Fame
  • How much the top executives at WWE earn
  • Update on Vince McMahon vs. Oliver Luck
  • Update on all the name changes of WWE talent and why

This Week’s Retro Observer Newsletter: February 7, 2005 Observer Newsletter: Royal Rumble review, business year in review

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Sunday News Update

  • Bryan and I will be back tonight talking the weekend news as review the recent TV shows. My weekend show with Garrett Gonzales is up on the site right now.
  • ROH finished up on Sinclair this weekend. So that tells you that the deal where Sinclair sold the promotion to Tony Khan didn’t include interest in keeping the show on the air. 
  • Last night’s New Japan show on FITE was marred by production issues multiple times throughout the show, including many times during the Minoru Suzuki vs. Tomohiro Ishii match and the Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay match. FITE lost the signal up and down the show and it was said to be almost unwatchable at times in the Jay White vs. Shota Umino match. There was also an issue with getting the fans into the building. The building was sold out but it took forever to get in with a lot of people missing the firs two matches. The archive of the show was said by New Japan that it will be up on FITE with no issues as soon as possible and will be up on New Japan World in English on 5/4.
  • We’re doing polls on the NJPW Wind City Riot show, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to [email protected]
  • We’re also looking for reports on last night’s WWE house show in Erie, PA and tonight’s show in Syracuse, NY to [email protected]
  • As far as trending stuff during the week, nothing from pro wrestling this week cracked the top 20. For yesterday, the UFC show was No. 11 at 100,000. The Bellator show on Friday was No. 20 for the day with 20,000. The Erroll Spence Jr. vs. Yordenis Ugas boxing PPV last night did 500,000 searches. The USFL on Saturday did 1 million. 
  • Oscar de la Hoya told TMZ that he wants to patch things up with Dana White. He said he was wrong for criticizing UFC and also said he would like to patch things up with Floyd Mayweather. He said he was moving to Las Vegas and wants to work with White as business partners.
  • Dana White last night talked about wanting to make a Jon Jones vs. Stipe Miocic fight.
  • Andrade is teasing a match with the former Cesaro in Mexico. Penta is teasing the idea of a match with C.M. Punk in AAA as a rematch off Wednesday’s match.

WWE

  • On the USFL game today on NBC, they advertised Raw for tomorrow night and the two names pushed were Cody Rhodes and Bianca Belair. We also know that this past week WWE send out stuff to an international station that broadcasts the show listing Rhodes as the top star on Raw and Roman Reigns as the top star on Smackdown. (thanks to Shannon Walsh and others)
  • Rob Gronkowski said that when he’s done with football held like a tag team match against The Rock according to an interview he did with TMZ.
  • Ivy Nile, Damon Kemp (Bobby Steveson) and Lash Legend are scheduled for the next NXT UK television tapings. Now that travel is easier, the idea of NXT talent going back-and-forth makes sense.

Other Notes

  • Warrior Wrestling on 4/23 in South Bend, IN has announced Will Ospreay defending their title against Blake Christian i the main event, plus Athena vs. Skye Blue vs. Shazza McKenzie for the vacant women’s title (Thunder Rosa will be at the show to vacate the title), Darius & Dante Martin vs,. Brian Cage & KC Navarro, Shane Strickland vs. Adam Brooks, Lucha champion Sam Adonis vs. Aramis, Karl Fredericks vs. Clark Connors and Alex Zayne vs Storm Grayson.
  • Eve has one of its biggest shows ever on 4/23 at The Venue in Great Portland Street in London. Among the matches are Kasey vs. Jetta, Shoko Nakajima, the current Princess of Princess champion for Tokyo Joshi Pro, faces Alex Windsor, Lizzy Evo vs. Emersyn Jayne, Emi Sakura vs.Charlie Morgan, Max the Impaler vs. Session Moth Martina and Nina Samuels vs. Emilia McKenzie.
  • IWA Promotions from last night in Mount Vernon, IL: Valentina Loca b Mazzerati, Lilith Grimm b Siera, Ray Lyn b Shalonce Royal to win the women’s title, Machiko b Queen Aminata, Nyla Rose b Christi Jaynes, Rachael Ellering b Mila Smidt, Dexter Roswell b Ryan Rembrandt, KiLynn King b Cassandra Golden to win the Belladonnas Forbidden Elegance title (thanks to Patrick Brandmeyer)
  • Horror Slam Wrestling from Friday night in Brownstown, MI: Rod Lee b Blake Blue, Jason Hotch b Kyler Coleman, Jeremiah Goldmain won six-way over Forever Young, Gavin Gradly, Iron Eagle, Jason Demilo and Hannah Henderson, Sean Lawhorn won three-way over Chinstrap Jesus and Atlas Hytower, Brutus Atwell b Breyer Wellington, Triple Rach won Battle Royal, Jack Price won four-way over Aero Boy, Sam Beale and Tanner Nix,Dread King Logan & Zach Thomas b Jaxson & Ace Evans, Bobby Beverly b Otis Goar, Malcolm Monroe III won three-way over Michael Elgin and Ryan Mythias, Eric Ryan b Chuck Steiner (thanks to Leonard Brand)
  • West Coast Pro on 5/13 in South San Francisco, CA at the State room has Will Ospreay vs. Titus Alexander, Timothy Thatcher vs. Kevin Blackwood and Biff Busick vs. Vinnie Massaro.
  • Wrestling Revolver from last night in Clive, IA: Moose b Mike Bailey to keep the Impact title, Deonna Purrazzo b Billie Starkz to keep the Reina de Reinas title, Jake Manning NC Dan he Dad, Logan James & Tyler Matrix b Jake Manning & Dan the Dad, Steve Maclin & Westin Blake b Davey Richards & Eddie Edwards to win the ag titles, Jake Crist b Manders in a Texas death match, Trey Miguel retained Impact X title and wins Revolver Remix tet over Ace Austin, Lince Dorado and Blake Christian, Crash Jaxon won death match over Madman Fulton, Jessicka Havok, Grizzly Kal Jak, Beef and Calvin Tankman, Shane Strickland b Athena, JT Dunn b Rich Swann to win Revolver title.

NJPW issues apology for Windy City Riot streaming problems

NJPW has issued an apology for the technical difficulties that plagued the FITE TV stream of Saturday’s Windy City Riot event. 

In a statement released on their website, the promotion apologized “for the persistent technical issues and poor video and audio quality of the Windy City Riot live stream on FITE.”

NJPW said that a rectified archived replay of the event “…will be made fully viewable in its entirety as soon as possible,” and announced that show will also be made available for NJPW World subscribers beginning on Wednesday, May 4. 

The statement also directed customers to FITE TV’s customer support page.

Here is the statement in full:

New Japan Pro-Wrestling deeply apologises for the persistent technical issues and poor video and audio quality of the Windy City Riot live stream on FITE.

A rectified archive of the event will be made fully viewable in its entirety as soon as possible. The archive will also be viewable on NJPW World from May 4.

For customer support, check FITE’s website here:

https://support.fite.tv/hc/en-us/sections/115000789034-How-to-order

Windy City Riot was headlined by Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay in their first-ever singles meeting. Our report on the event can be found here.

Jon Moxley issues challenge to Hiroshi Tanahashi for NJPW Capital Collision

The end of tonight’s NJPW Windy City Riot show saw Jon Moxley challenge Hiroshi Tanahashi.

After a brutal victory over Will Ospreay, Moxley tonight ended the show praising Ospreay for accepting his challenge and offered a rematch. However, he said he couldn’t say the same for a certain NJPW legend, specifically calling out Hiroshi Tanahashi. He issued the challenge for May 14th in Washington D.C. at NJPW’s Capital Collision event, saying he will fight him even if he had to drag him to D.C. by his ponytail. He ended the show by saying that he is the new ace of New Japan Pro Wrestling.

Tanahashi is one of the names advertised for the upcoming show at D.C.’s Entertainment and Sports Arena. Others include Kazuchika Okada, Jay White, Will Ospreay, Jon Moxley, Minoru Suzuki, Jeff Cobb, Tom Lawlor, and Fred Rosser. Eddie Kingston appeared at Windy City Riot earlier in the show and issued a challenge to Tomohiro Ishii, who accepted.

The finish of tonight’s match between Moxley and Ospreay had Moxley deliver the death rider DDT to Ospreay, who kicked out after two. However, the referee counted to three and rang the bell, not seeing Moxley go for a rear naked choke and Ospreay submitting after the kickout. After the match, Moxley laid out the referee with the death rider.

Eddie Kingston challenges Tomohiro Ishii at NJPW Windy City Riot

Eddie Kingston challenged Tomohiro Ishii to a match for NJPW’s Capital Collision event on May 14.

After Ishii defeated Minoru Suzuki at tonight’s Windy City Riot event in Chicago, Kingston came out and confronted Ishii. He said that while Ishii is known for his strong style, Kingston lives and breathes the king’s road style, referring to All Japan’s style of wrestling in the 1990s. He then issued the challenge for May 15th in Washington D.C., a challenge that Ishii quickly accepted.

Kingston has made several appearances for New Japan Strong in the last year. Most recently, he teamed with Fred Rosser to defeat Daniel Garcia and Fred Yehi at NJPW’s Strong Style Evolved tapings that were held on March 20. That continued the ongoing feud between Kingston and the Jericho Appreciation Society, which Garcia is a member of.

Names already announced for Capital Collision include Kazuchika Okada, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Jay White, Will Ospreay, Jon Moxley, Minoru Suzuki, Jeff Cobb, Tom Lawlor, and Fred Rosser.

Shota Umino appears at NJPW Windy City Riot, challenges Jay White

Shota Umino appeared at tonight’s NJPW Windy City Riot event, answering Jay White’s US of Jay open challenge.

In a video that aired after Jay White made his entrance, Jon Moxley was shown instructing the challenger to go to the ring. It was then revealed that the mystery challenger was Umino, a former protege and tag team partner of Jon Moxley during his time as a young lion on the NJPW roster. He emerged from the stage holding Moxley’s ring jacket. Although Umino got several near falls toward the end of the match, White managed to pick up the win with the bladerunner.

Since the fall of 2019, Umino has been on excursion in NJPW, mainly wrestling for Revolution Pro Wrestling in the United Kingdom. He most recently wrestled for the promotion on March 6, defeating Lucian Phillips.

In recent months, Jay White has remained on NJPW Strong, issuing open challenges in what he has called the US of Jay Open Challenge. Since January, he has defeated the likes of Jay Lethal, Swerve Strickland, Chris Sabin, and Mike Bailey.

NJPW Windy City Riot live results: Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay

Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay headlines NJPW Windy City Riot in Chicago tonight. 

Moxley and Ospreay have never faced off in singles competition, making the main event a first-time matchup. 

In the semi-main, NJPW stalwarts Minoru Suzuki and Tomohiro Ishii will do battle. Suzuki holds a 3-2 edge in career singles matches against Ishii. 

Jay White will hold the latest edition of his US of Jay open challenge series, facing a mystery opponent. 

In a six-man Chicago street fight, David Finlay, Juice Robinson, and Brody King will take on JONAH, Shane Haste, and Bad Dude Tito. The match is expected to be Robinson’s NJPW swan song, as he has announced that his contract is expiring and he will not be renewing with the company. 

In an eclectic 12-man tag, United Empire’s Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, TJP, Aaron Henare, Mark Davis, and Kyle Fletcher will face Scott Norton, Karl Anderson, Doc Gallows, Hikuleo, El Phantasmo, and Chris Bey. 

Yuji Nagata will challenge NJPW Strong Openweight Champion Tom Lawlor in a non-title match. This match was advertised as a title match and a non-title match at various points, but it appears as though the decision was made not to put the title on the line. 

Josh Alexander, Fred Rosser, Chris Dickinson, Alex Coughlin, and Ren Narita will face JR Kratos, Danny Limelight, Jorel Nelson, Royce Isaacs, and Black Tiger in a 10-man tag. 

AEW’s QT Marshall, Nick Comoroto, and Aaron Solo take on Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors, and Yuya Uemura in the opener. 

Wheeler Yuta and Rocky Romero face Kevin Knight and The DKC in a pre-show dark match. 

Our live coverage begins at 8 p.m. Eastern time. 

Dark match: Wheeler Yuta & Rocky Romero defeated Kevin Knight & The DKC (9:30)

The Factory (Aaron Solow, Nick Comoroto & QT Marshall) defeated Clark Connors, Karl Fredericks & Yuya Uemura 

Most of this match was lost to technical issues, but what little made the broadcast was bad.

Before the match, QT cut a promo. He said this match was to determine the world’s top training system, either New Japan’s LA Dojo or The Factory.

Comoroto and Uemura opened the match with a short back and forth. Fredericks tagged in and immediately challenged QT. QT teased the interaction but tagged out to Comoroto. After Comoroto established control, QT actually tagged in.

Fredericks got the upper hand against QT right as the Fite lost the signal from the venue. From the opening moments, it was clear this show had production issues. The video quality was poor, and the audio sounded like Fite lifted it from a bootleg ECW VHS. Then the feed cut out altogether. This show was off to a great start.

Once the feed was back, Connors was in control of the match, and there was a commentary team. The LA Dojo team tried to maintain their lead, but Comoroto caught all three of his opponents in an awkward Samoan drop; this was enough for The Factory to recapture momentum.

Uemura led a very awkward exchange before a dive to Comoroto and Solow left QT and Uemura alone in the ring. Uemura looked to close, but a low blow to Uemura opened him up for a cutter. After landing his finish, QT pinned Uemura to bring this opening match to an end.

Alex Coughlin, Chris Dickinson, Fred Rosser, Josh Alexander & Ren Narita defeated Team Filthy (Black Tiger, Danny Limelight, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos & Royce Isaacs)

This match was what you would expect from a 10-man tag. It was incredibly busy with a handful of fun spots. 

This match opened with a massive brawl. As things calmed down, both teams traded tags and short singles exchanges. Eventually, Team Filthy singled out Dickinson and cemented a strong lead. 

After a long struggle, Dickinson dropped Limelight and hot-tagged to Rosser. Rosser took control for his team, and Alexander worked to maintain it. The match broke down for a while, leaving Coughlin and Kratos alone in the ring. Coughlin dropped Kratos with a German to bring back some order; this lasted for about 90 seconds. 

Another brawl broke out, and this time it ended with a fantastic dive to the outside to take out everyone in the match. Back in the ring, Rosser secured a choke and forced Tiger to submit. 

Rosser refused to let go of his choke, forcing Tom Lawler to hit the ring to make a save. As Team Filthy beat down Rosser, Yuji Nagata hit the ring to save Rosser. 

NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) defeated Yuji Nagata 

This was a delightful match. 

After Nagata saved Rosser from the match prior, he grabbed a microphone and challenged Lawlor to put his title on the line. Lawler accepted, making this a Strong Openweight Championship match. 

This match opened with a fun striking sequence that eventually spilled to the floor. Lawlor maintained control on the floor before leading the developing brawl back inside the ropes. Lawlor then began working Nagata on the mat. 

Nagata continually avoided near submission defeat. Eventually, Nagata escaped back to the outside, where he landed a massive exploder suplex to gain his first lead. Inside the ropes, Nagata landed a butterfly suplex and secured the Nagata lock. From the Nagata lock, Lawlor transitioned into a leg lock. After escaping the leg lock, Nagata returned to the Nagata lock. A Justice Knee and exploder suplex from the top rope secured a Nagata near fall. 

Lawlor secured a choke that Nagata reversed into a back suplex for a match reset. Lawlor secured another choke, leading to a penalty kick. After Nagata kicked out of the pin that followed, Lawlor dropped Nagata with a knee to the back of the head; this time, Nagata didn’t kick out.

United Empire (Aaron Henare, Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Kyle Fletcher, Mark Davis & TJP) defeated Bullet Club (Chris Bey, Doc Gallows, El Phantasmo, Hikuleo & Karl Anderson) & Scott Norton

Both teams traded tags and short singles interactions as the match began. Norton tagged into the match and challenged Cobb, leading to an exchange of suplexes. Norton dropped TJP and Cobb with a pair of sluggish clotheslines and tagged out.

Bullet Club worked to isolate TJP, primarily by raking his back. Davis eventually received the hot tag, leading to a UE takeover. The match broke down into a couple of brawls, finally leaving O-Khan, Cobb, and the Good Brothers alone in the ring. The Good Brothers set Cobb up in a magic killer, but O-Khan made the save (with about 30 Mongolian chops).

To bring the chaos to an end, Aussie Open cleared the ring and dropped Bey with Coriolis.

After the match, O-Khan cut a promo and stood tall with the rest of UE, gold in hand. This crowd loved O-Khan. 

Chicago Street Fight: FinJuice (David Finlay & Juice Robinson) & Brody King vs. TMDK (JONAH & Shane Haste) & Bad Dude Tito

This was an insane hardcore match, complete with tons of meandering and contrived weapon spots for the sake of weapon spots.

The match started with both teams swinging chairs at each other, leading to a brawl on the floor. What followed was a fight deep in the crowd, complete with barricade slams, drops to the floor, a fire extinguisher spot, and some trash can offense.

Back in the ring, team FinJuice singled out JONAH. JONAH was saved by his team before Juice could put him through some chair contraption. Juice continued to advance, however, by blocking a corner splash with a ladder.

Tito laid Juice out with an exploder into a ladder. King answered Tito with a nasty fireman’s carry drop into the chair contraption from earlier. This opened the door for JONAH, who cleared the ring with help from a trashcan.

JONAH and company isolated Finlay before his team eventually made the save. Team FinJuice then cleared the ring and started filling it with chairs. After throwing thirty or so chairs in the ring, team FinJuice threw all their opponents onto the pile.

Juice took out Tito with a spear through a table just as Jonah lept through a ladder, crushing a patiently waiting King. Finlay dropped Haste onto a chair, but Jonah answered with a sledgehammer shot. Juice was in tow, hitting Pulp Friction and setting Finlay up for a hammer shot of his own. With JONAH dropped, Finlay was able to secure the pinfall win. 

U-S-of-Jay Open Challenge: Jay White defeated Shota Umino 

Umino really connected with the crowd, and White is the industry standard for great wrestlers. Is it any surprise this was an incredible match? 

Before the match, Jon Moxley appeared on the screen from an undisclosed location. After a “Let’s go shooter”, it was clear Shota Umino was Jay White’s opponent. 

Umino started the match by rushing the ring and gaining a massive lead early. Regardless of his fast start, Umino’s lead was short-lived. White eventually slipped into control and began picking apart Umino. White took the action to the outside, slamming Umino into the barricades before a big lariat left Umino with a near fall. 

White toyed with Umino, eventually launching Umino’s rally. Umino scored a near fall after a reverse DDT but failed to follow up. White turned things back around with a quick DDT of his own before insulting Umino in the corner. White continued to mock Umino with standing chops, but Umino answered with another rally. 

Umino landed a ton of offense and looked to have victory in his sights. After a couple of convincing near falls from Umino, White caught Umino in the blade runner, bringing this match to an end.

Tomohiro Ishii defeated Minoru Suzuki

This is the only match you could imagine from this pair. It was a war of stiff striking and exciting sequences; good stuff.

This match opened with a quick strike exchange that left both men on equal footing. Suzuki then began to focus Ishii’s right arm following an opening from an Ishii single-arm choke attempt. Suzuki brought the match to the floor, slamming Ishii into the barricade.

Ishii grabbed a chair to slow Suzuki’s advance, but Suzuki answered with a chair of his own. Then, after a quick chair duel, both men returned to the ring. A swift suplex from Ishii bought him a moment of reprieve, but Suzuki’s arm work let him slip back into control.

Ishii initiated a forearm battle that turned into an extended striking sequence. This went on for quite some time, with a wide array of striking and many momentum shifts.

After a brutal headbutt/sliding kick combination, Suzuki tried to close with the Gotch. Ishii reversed, delivering a headbutt of his own that left Suzuki slumped. Ishii landed a pair of enormous lariats; Suzuki kicked out at one. A sliding lariat left Ishii with a two-count.

Ishii tried for the brainbuster, but Suzuki reversed. Suzuki tried for the Gotch again, but Ishii slipped free. Ishii landed another headbutt, lifted Suzuki into the brainbuster, and dropped Suzuki on his head to win the match.

After the match, Eddie Kingston walked to the ring and challenged Ishii to a match come May 14th in Washington DC. Kingston made a point of their differing styles, Ishii being strong style trough and trough, while Kingston is a student of the King’s Road. 

Jon Moxley defeated Will Ospreay

This was something else. These men put it all on the line and pulled off an exhilarating to close the show.

This match opened with a brawl on the outside. Moxley had a slight lead once things found their way to the ring, but Ospreay took control by directing the action back to the floor.

After busting open Moxley, Ospreay brought the fight back between the ropes. Ospreay began to take his time exploiting his newfound control, leaving Moxely open to counter the handspring cutter with a German suplex and dropkick to the floor. At this point, Ospreay was also bleeding.

Moxley led a short sequence before Ospreay retook control with a top rope forearm. Moxley answered with a pair of suplexes and a forearm strike to counter a springboard attempt. Ospreay blocked Moxley’s attempt for an apron driver, delivering a cutter to the floor instead.

Ospreay set Moxley up on an announce table and delivered an insane elbow drop from the top rope. Back in the ring, Ospreay hit a springboard dropkick and shooting star press for a near fall. Moxley blocked the OsCutter and reversed into a Paradigm Shift DDT; Ospreay answered with a lightning-quick hidden blade.

After a high-impact sequence of moves, Moxley ducked the second attempt at hidden blade. Moxley connected with a barrage of elbows and tried for a choke, but Ospreay slipped free. Ospreay hit the OsCutter; Moxley kicked out. Ospreay tried to close again but was quick to respond with a lariat. Moxley dropped Ospreay with an awesome curb stomp, resulting in another convincing near fall. Moxley tried for another lariat, but Ospreay reversed into a Spanish fly and hidden blade. Moxley fought back, hitting, not one, but two more Paradigm Shifts; Ospreay kicked out again. Moxley locked in a rear-naked choke as the bell sounded pre-maturely. Regardless, this was the end of the match.

After the botched finish, Moxley dropped the referee with a Paradigm Shift.

Moxley cut a promo to close the show praising Ospreay and offering a rematch. The promo took a turn as Moxley called out Hiroshi Tanahashi, claiming his patience has run out. Moxley said he would fight Tanahashi on May 14th in Washington DC, even if he had to drag him there by his ponytail. Moxley ended the promo by saying he is the new ace of New Japan. 

AEW’s Wheeler Yuta set for NJPW Windy City Riot dark match

A dark match featuring AEW talent and ROH Pure Champion Wheeler Yuta has been added to Saturday’s NJPW Windy City Riot show. 

Yuta will team with Rocky Romero against frequent tag partners Kevin Knight and The DKC. The match was announced on Tuesday. 

As part of AEW’s Best Friends group, Yuta was inducted initiated into NJPW’s CHAOS faction, which includes Romero as a member. In recent weeks on AEW television, Yuta has been courted by William Regal, Bryan Danielson, and Jon Moxley of the Blackpool Combat Club. 

Yuta and Romero vs. Knight and The DKC will start at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time for the live crowd.

Nine matches are now set for Saturday’s event. Here is the full card:

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser, Chris Dickinson, Josh Alexander, Alex Coughlin & Ren Narita vs. Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Danny Limelight & Black Tiger
  • Scott Norton, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson, El Phantasmo, Chris Bey & Hikuleo vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Aaron Henare, TJP, Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher
  • Chicago street fight: David Finlay, Juice Robinson & Brody King vs. Shane Haste, JONAH & Bad Dude Tito
  • QT Marshall, Aaron Solo & Nick Comoroto vs. Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors & Yuya Uemura
  • Dark match: Wheeler Yuta & Rocky Romero vs. Kevin Knight & The DKC

AEW’s The Factory set for NJPW Windy City Riot six-man tag

The card for Saturday’s NJPW Windy City Riot has been finalized after the addition of a six-man tag featuring AEW talent. 

In the opening contest, AEW’s QT Marshall, Nick Comoroto, and Aaron Solo will face Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors, and Yuya Uemura. The match stems from an angle on NJPW Strong where Marshall asked Fredericks to join The Factory, only for Fredericks to decline. The Factory attacked Fredericks, then Uemura and Connors made the save. 

Eight matches are set for Saturday’s show, which airs on FITE TV. 

The lineup: 

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser, Chris Dickinson, Josh Alexander, Alex Coughlin & Ren Narita vs. Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Danny Limelight & Black Tiger
  • Scott Norton, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson, El Phantasmo, Chris Bey & Hikuleo vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Aaron Henare, TJP, Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher
  • Chicago street fight: David Finlay, Juice Robinson & Brody King vs. Shane Haste, JONAH & Bad Dude Tito
  • QT Marshall, Aaron Solo & Nick Comoroto vs. Karl Fredericks, Clark Connors & Yuya Uemura

Chicago street fight announced for NJPW Windy City Riot

A six-man Chicago street fight has been officially announced for NJPW Windy City Riot. 

The team of David Finlay, Juice Robinson, and Brody King will take on TMDK’s Shane Haste, JONAH, and Bad Dude Tito. FinJuice issued a challenge to the TMDK trio for a match on last week’s NJPW Strong, and the trios bout with King as FinJuice’s partner has now been made official. 

Seven bouts have now been announced for the Saturday, April 16 event. Here is the lineup: 

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser, Chris Dickinson, Josh Alexander, Alex Coughlin & Ren Narita vs. Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Danny Limelight & Black Tiger
  • Scott Norton, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson, El Phantasmo, Chris Bey & Hikuleo vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Aaron Henare, TJP, Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher
  • Chicago street fight: David Finlay, Juice Robinson & Brody King vs. Shane Haste, JONAH & Bad Dude Tito

Scott Norton announced for NJPW Windy City Riot 12-man tag

Former IWGP Heavyweight Champion and IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Champion Scott Norton is returning to an NJPW ring for the first time in five years.

Norton will be part of a 12-man tag team match at Windy City Riot on Saturday, April 16, teaming with Bullet Club against United Empire. 

Norton, The Good Brothers (Doc Gallows & Karl Anderson), El Phantasmo, Chris Bey, and Hikuleo will represent Bullet Club against Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, TJP, Aaron Henare, and Aussie Open (Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher).

Norton, 60, last appeared for NJPW in 2017, taking part in the New Japan Rumble at Wrestle Kingdom 11, then wrestling in a 10-man tag the next night at New Year Dash. 

Six matches are now official for Windy City Riot. The lineup: 

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Tomohiro Ishii vs. Minoru Suzuki
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser, Chris Dickinson, Josh Alexander, Alex Coughlin & Ren Narita vs. Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Danny Limelight & Black Tiger
  • Scott Norton, Doc Gallows, Karl Anderson, El Phantasmo, Chris Bey & Hikuleo vs. Great-O-Khan, Jeff Cobb, Aaron Henare, TJP, Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher

NJPW Strong Openweight title match set for Windy City Riot

A Championship match has been added to NJPW Windy City Riot. 

“Filthy” Tom Lawlor will defend the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship against Yuji Nagata in Chicago. The match was announced on Monday evening. 

Five matches are now official for the Saturday, April 16 event. AEW’s Jon Moxley will face Will Ospreay on the show, plus Tomohiro Ishii will take on Minoru Suzuki in a match set up with a challenge at this past week’s Lonestar Shootout event in Dallas. 

Here is the lineup so far: 

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Yuji Nagata
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • Team Rosser (Fred Rosser, Josh Alexander, Alex Coughlin, Ren Narita & Chris Dickinson) vs. Team Filthy (Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Black Tiger & Danny Limelight)

Minoru Suzuki vs. Tomohiro Ishii set for NJPW Windy City Riot

A new match has been announced for NJPW Windy City Riot on Saturday, April 16. 

Minoru Suzuki will face Tomohiro Ishii in a bout that was set up at today’s Lonestar Shootout pay-per-view in Dallas. 

Suzuki defeated the debuting Killer Kross at Lonestar Shootout, while Ishii defeated Chris Dickinson in the main event of the show. Following Ishii’s win, Suzuki appeared and issued a challenge to Ishii. The match was then officially announced by the promotion. 

Jon Moxley also appeared at Lonestar Shootout to hype his Chicago match against Will Ospreay. Moxley vs. Ospreay, Suzuki vs. Ishii, a Jay White open challenge, plus a 10-man tag have been announced for the show so far. The lineup:

NJPW Windy City Riot, Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Eastern time on FITE TV —

  • Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Tomohiro Ishii
  • US of Jay open challenge: Jay White vs. TBA
  • Fred Rosser, Josh Alexander, Chris Dickinson, Ren Narita & Alex Coughlin vs. Team Filthy (Royce Isaacs, Jorel Nelson, JR Kratos, Black Tiger & Danny Limelight)

Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay set for NJPW Windy City Riot

Jon Moxley vs. Will Ospreay is official for NJPW’s Windy City Riot event next month.

After Ospreay spent much of the NJPW Cup tour challenging Moxley, NJPW’s social media posted a video of Moxley accepting Ospreay’s challenge, saying that Ospreay’s words have consequences. Moxley told Ospreay that while Ospreay was more talented than he was in terms of wrestling, it may now be time for Moxley to beat some humility into him, with Moxley promising that he would beat down Ospreay into the ring like a railroad spike.

NJPW then confirmed the match would take place at Windy City Riot:

Moxley last wrestled for NJPW at Showdown 2021 back in October, where he and Eddie Kingston lost to Lance Archer and Minoru Suzuki.

Names also announced for Windy City Riot, which takes place on April 16 at the Odeum Expo Center in Villa Park, Illinois include:

  • Minoru Suzuki
  • Will Ospreay
  • Jay White
  • Tomohiro Ishii
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Jeff Cobb
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser
  • JONAH
  • Brody King
  • Karl Fredericks
  • Clark Connors
  • Hikuleo
  • Rocky Romero
  • Doc Gallows
  • Karl Anderson
  • The Great-O-Khan

NJPW Windy City Riot to air live on FITE TV pay-per-view

NJPW Windy City Riot will air as a pay-per-view on FITE TV. 

The promotion announced today that the Saturday, April 16 show will air exclusively on FITE at a $19.99 price point, with an archived version of the broadcast being added to the NJPW World streaming service at a later date. 

The announcement marks a departure from recent NJPW shows in the United States, where the approach has been to offer the show with English commentary for purchase on FITE, with the show also streaming live on NJPW World with Japanese commentary. 

No matches have been announced for the Chicago-area event to this point, but the lineup will include talent from the NJPW main unit roster, the US-based NJPW strong brand, as well as outside talent that the promotion regularly uses. 

The announced lineup: 

  • Jon Moxley
  • Minoru Suzuki
  • Will Ospreay
  • Jay White
  • Tomohiro Ishii
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Jeff Cobb
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser
  • JONAH
  • Brody King
  • Karl Fredericks
  • Clark Connors
  • Hikuleo
  • Rocky Romero
  • Doc Gallows
  • Karl Anderson
  • The Great-O-Khan

Good Brothers, Great-O-Khan announced for NJPW Windy City Riot

NJPW has made three new talent announcements for their April 16 Windy City Riot event in the Chicago area. 

The Good Brothers, Doc Gallows and Karl Anderson, have been announced for the show. Gallows and Anderson last appeared for NJPW at Resurgence last August. The duo also took part in the Tag Team Turbulence tournament on NJPW Strong last summer, ultimately winning the series.

The Great-O-Khan has also been added to the Windy City Riot lineup. O-Khan is currently taking part in the New Japan Cup tournament, where he has advanced to the third round. 

No matches have been announced for Windy City Riot to this point. The show will take place Saturday, April 16 at the Odeum Expo Center in Villa Park, Illinois. Tickets for the event are on sale now. 

The announced lineup:

  • Jon Moxley
  • Minoru Suzuki
  • Will Ospreay
  • Jay White
  • Tomohiro Ishii
  • Tom Lawlor
  • Jeff Cobb
  • Juice Robinson
  • David Finlay
  • Yuji Nagata
  • Fred Rosser
  • JONAH
  • Brody King
  • Karl Fredericks
  • Clark Connors
  • Hikuleo
  • Rocky Romero
  • Doc Gallows
  • Karl Anderson
  • The Great-O-Khan