NJPW World Tag League Finals live results: Tsuji & Kidd vs. TMDK

NJPW crowns the winners of the 2025 World Tag League tournament today in Kumamoto.

Yota Tsuji and Gabe Kidd face TMDK’s Zack Sabre Jr. and Ryohei Oiwa in today’s finals, with the winners in line for a shot at the IWGP Tag Team Championship at Wrestle Kingdom 20 next month. OSKAR and Yuto-Ice currently hold those titles.

The NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Championship is on the line in today’s semi-main event, with Toru Yano, YOH, and Master Wato defending their belts against EVIL, SANADA, and Ren Narita.

The other title match on the show is in the opener, with NJPW World TV Champion El Phantasmo defending in an open challenge against a mystery opponent.

A series of tag team bouts fill out today’s undercard, with angles setting up the Road to Tokyo Dome tour likely to take place on today’s show. Road to Tokyo Dome shows take place on December 19, 21, and 22, the final stops before Wrestle Kingdom 20 on January 4, 2026.

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Main Show

El Phantasmo defeated Hartly Jackson for the NJPW World Television Championship

Phantasmo struggled to attain any momentum against the girthy Jackson. The thick Aussie dragged his Canadian opponent onto the entrance, but the champion rebounded by catapulting him into the barricade. Jackson recovered with a Jagged Edge onto the hard floor.

Hoping to leverage his larger opponent for a vertical suplex, Phantasmo instead gasped for breath after being flipped onto the unforgiving cerulean mat. A Flying Crossbody and a Moonsault teetered Phantasmo closer to control, punctuated by a bottom rope elbow drop.

Jackson charged into Phantasmo’s corner, only to meet a Tornado-DDT that staggered the giant to the mat. A senton from the gargantuan challenger faded into the champion’s crucifix pin for a nearfall. Another Jagged Edge failed to seal the deal. With a CR2 and a Thunderkiss ’86, Phantasmo defeated Jackson to retain the Television Championship.

(Neat sprint to start the show. Ultimately, a friendly David vs Goliath bout with some close calls.)

Monster Sauce (Alex Zayne & Lance Archer), Team 100 (Satoshi Kojima & Taichi), & Masatora Yasuda defeated Bishamon (Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI), Katsuya Murashima, Oleg Boltin, & Tatsuya Matsumoto

Young Lions Murashima and Yasuda began the match, seeing the former overbear the latter with tenacious strength. Zayne tagged in, biting Murashima’s fingers. Goto momentarily gave young Murashima a moment of respite, but Taichi inflicted further pain. Goto and YOSHI-HASHI coordinated to fell Archer onto Taichi’s carcass.

Joined by Boltin and Matsumoto, Bishamon delivered a flurry of fists on Kojima’s back. Boltin impressed the Kumamoto crowd by twisting Archer around in a Boltin Shake. Kojima unleashed a torrent of chest shots to tenderize the Kazakh powerhouse. Matsumoto, Murashima, and Bishamon united against Kojima. Boltin, Bishamon, Matsumoto, and Murashima dogpiled Kojima. This was broken by Archer slamming Zayne onto the mountain of bodies.

Kojima survived Matsumoto’s elbow drop and dropkick to whip out a lariat to finish the ten-man tag.

(This match set up Matsumoto nicely as someone to keep an eye on in the Young Lions’ division. Kojima suffering during the dogpile spot was hilarious.)

House Of Torture (Don Fale, SHO, & Yoshinobu Kanemaru) defeated El Desperado, Shoma Kato, & Shuji Ishikawa

SHO denigrated Kumamoto and his opponents to lull them into a false sense of security for an ambush. Ishikawa handled Fale enough to ensure a stalemate. Desperado sped onto the scene, dancing in and out of SHO’s wrist holds. Kanemaru exposed a turnbuckle and held Kato down as SHO dismembered Desperado.

Kato surprised Kanemaru with a headscissors takedown following Desperado’s vertical suplex. Kato pulled full throttle on a Boston Crab to SHO’s prone body. Fale slammed Kato, offering him up for SHO to successfully pin.

(Aside from the occasional interferences from Fale and Kanemaru, this was a fine trios match.)

War Dragons (Drilla Moloney & Shingo Takagi) & Taiji Ishimori defeated House Of Torture (Chase Owens, DOUKI, & Yujiro Takahashi)

Ishimori and DOUKI circled each other, the latter clearly alerting the former to House of Torture’s looming dirty tactics. Though DOUKI gained control of Ishimori, he couldn’t evade the quick wit of the Bone Soldier. Owens brawled with Takagi into the crowd. He joined Takahashi, who incapacitated Moloney, to assist DOUKI’s torture of Ishimori.

Moloney speared and vertically suplexed Owens. Takagi joined Moloney to break Owens. He then used his power to withstand Owens. Moloney and Takagi combined their efforts to punish Owens with a War Dragon to finish the bout.

(This match largely focused on the Junior Heavyweight rivalry between Ishimori and DOUKI more than anything. However, this continued to expand on the month-plus build of the War Dogs working in tandem with the former Los Ingobrenable de Japon.)

Hiroshi Tanahashi, Shota Umino, & Yuya Uemura defeated Knockout Brothers (OSKAR & Yuto-Ice) & Daiki Nagai

Umino handled Yuto-Ice and OSKAR before ultimately being slammed down by the towering latter. Yuto-Ice punched Uminio in the gut as OSKAR held his arms back. The Knockout Brothers continued their nonexistent faith in Nagai, refusing to tag him in. They teased him, tagging him in just to tag him back out; Umino took advantage of this by charging both men.

Uemura sprinted in, slamming into the brick wall that was Yuto-Ice, who had elbows waiting for him. An arm drag lent Uemura some momentum for his team, wrecking Yuto-Ice. The Ace finally tagged in, swinging a comeback for his team with a series of moves, concluding with a senton.

With his oppressive teammates disposed of, Nagai tagged in, suplexing Tanahashi. Proceeding with a Spinebuster, Nagai earned enough time for Yuto-Ice and then OSKAR to halt the trajectory of the opposing team. Uemura, Uminio, and Tanahashi equalized their opponents. Nagai’s spirit burned with passion, but Tanahashi extinguished it with a Sling Blade and a High-Fly Flow.

(Nagai’s bitterness toward his new teammates drove the match in an interesting direction, which can lead to an exciting shift once Knockout Brothers take note of his contributions. That was the real meat to this match, that and Tanahashi’s impending retirement.)

David Finlay & Hiromu Takahashi versus United Empire (Callum Newman & Great-O-Khan) ended in disqualification

Before the match could start, Takahashi and Finlay ambushed United Empire en route to the ring. Khan recovered in time to propel Finlay into the steel blue barricade. Newman did the same to Takahashi. Hurling Finlay into rows of chairs, Khan’s actions were replicated by Takahashi to Newman. Fans parted from their seats as Finlay drove Khan near a wall. Newman usurped Takahashi, battering him against the ring apron and the barricade.

At last in the ring, Newman rained elbows into Takahashi’s jaw. Dispatching Takahashi and Finlay, Newman tagged in Khan. Takahashi tried to give chase, but Khan sent him down with strikes that echoed Newman’s earlier ones. Withstanding a Mongolian Chop, Takahashi used Khan’s momentum for a roll-up pin that failed. Finlay leapt into action, clobbering Khan in the corner with forearm strikes. Finlay’s powerbomb bolstered the damage sustained by Khan. Newman tossed a steel chair at Finlay’s skull, disqualifying him and Khan.

Post-match: Newman then assaulted Takahashi with his own GHC Junior Heavyweight Championship. Continuing his berserk siege, Newman took Gedo’s body (unconscious thanks to Jakob Austin Young) and placed his head in a steel chair. Finlay chased him off as the crowd booed him away. They left Young to be picked apart by the War Dogs and Shingo Takagi. Finlay delivered an impassioned speech about remembering who he is. He challenged the United Empire to a match at Wrestle Kingdom 20.

Master Wato, Toru Yano & YOH (c) defeated House Of Torture (EVIL, Ren Narita & SANADA) for the NEVER Openweight Six Man Tag Team Championship

Unsurprisingly, House of Torture waylaid the champions from behind on the way to the ring. When the match started, YOH overcame the team before twisting SANADA like a pretzel, who returned the favor. Yoshinobu Kanemaru, wearing a referee shirt, allowed SANADA to pin YOH and called for the bell.

SHO issued a challenge for the House of Torture and the now-former champions at Wrestle Kingdom to settle the rivalry once and for all. YOH instead demanded they return to the ring. Referee Marty Asami and Aaron Wolfe corralled the House of Torture back to the ringside. SANADA and Narita continued clobbering SHO in the ring. The stable resumed beating down on Yano and Wato. When Wolfe tried to pull them off, he was sent away.

The match resumed, as Yano was sent into an exposed turnbuckle by SANADA. EVIL suffocated Yano with a choker. Asami prevented Wato and YOH from rescuing him. Yano briefly flashed some fighting spirit, but Narita grounded him again with a nasty leg hold. Wato swung a comeback with tijeras takedowns on all three House of Torture opponents, punctuated with a tope con hilo. EVIL tripped Wato before he could take advantage of Narita’s weakened state. House of Torture used a Dick-to-Dick Contact on Wato. Mirroring the start of the match, YOH tied up SANADA in the Paradise Lock before hitting him with a dropkick. SANADA snuck in a low blow. Distracting Asami with a teased guitar shot, SHO choked YOH. Narita took his turn to distract Asami with a pipe. Finally swinging his guitar, SANADA missed and received karmic justice in a low blow. Wolfe returned to fire back against the House of Torture. YOH pinned SANADA to retain the championship.

(What a mess. I’m sure there could have been a better way to build heat between Wolfe and EVIL. This just felt like a waste of time that only made YOH look stronger.)

Main Event: World Tag League 2025 Final

TMDK (Ryohei Oiwa & Zack Sabre Jr.) defeated Gabe Kidd & Yota Tsuji

Oiwa gained an early advantage with a side headlock. Tsuji fired back as he gained momentum running the ropes, eventually grounding Oiwa. Sabre entrapped Kidd, dancing around in every grapple reversal. OIwa enforced control over Kidd’s shoulder, twisting around to wear him down. Kidd powered out of Oiwa’s wrist control from a preceding arm drag, only to wind up there again. Sabre manipulated Kidd’s fingers, tying his arms behind his back.

TMDK combined their efforts to tweak Kidd’s arms. Tsuji rescued him at the expense of his own arms. Sabre bent Kidd’s left arm into uncomfortable angles in a Hammerlock. Resorting to chops, Kidd pulverized Sabre’s flesh on the chest. Sabre made it back to the ring at the 17-count following Kidd’s thrashing at the barricade. Tsuji and Kidd pelted Sabre’s chest until it was raw and pink. Oiwa barreled in with a double clothesline to his opponents. Kidd supplanted Oiwa from the top rope with an avalanche suplex. Oiwa bounced back with a Tenzan Suplex. Flatline by Tsuji set Sabre up for Kidd’s arduous chest slaps. Sabre set Oiwa up for a lariat + roll-up, which Kidd countered. Tsuji rescued Kidd from Sabre’s jackknife. Kidd and Sabre exchanged kicks, rendering both men flat.

Sabre dodged a Marlowe Crash for a Guillotine Clutch. Tsuji responded in kind with a Boston Crab. TMDK pulled their opponent’s arms back so far, forcing their opponents to watch each other. Kidd soon found the strength to launch Oiwa into Sabre. After a Marlowe Crash, Tsuji set his sights on a Gene Blaster, only for Sabre to counter with a Zack Driver. Kidd suffered after a Doctor Bomb, but fired back after a powerbomb of his own. Tsuji and Kidd nearly finished TMDK with a Kidd Blaster to Oiwa, but Sabre thwarted them. Sabre held Tsuji at bay on the apron whilst Oiwa trounced Kidd with The Grip to win the 2025 World Tag League.

(I thoroughly enjoyed this match, but it was a bit too long. That said, turning the match into a quiet singles outing in the second half between Kidd and Oiwa added to the drama. Moreover, this match gave credence to Oiwa for winning a major NJPW tournament. Here’s to many more.)

Final Thoughts

Perhaps the best match on this show is the Final itself. It had the tension, the drama, the frenetic and brutal pace to conclude the night on a high note. Especially for the feel-good moment for Ryohei Oiwa. The House of Torture trios match, I can’t say the same. The trios and ten-man tag matches were standard fare. But Hartley Jackson and El Phantasmo’s battle was entertaining.

NJPW World Tag League & Super Junior Tag League live results: Winners crowned

NJPW crowns new World Tag League and Super Junior Tag League winners today in Sendai. 

In the World Tag League finals, Bishamon (Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI) face Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher and Mark Davis). Though not officially announced as of yet, the winners will likely challenge FTR for the IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team titles at Wrestle Kingdom. 

In the Super Junior Tag League finals, CHAOS’s Lio Rush and YOH face Bullet Club’s Ace Austin and Chris Bey. The winners will be next in line to challenge for TJP and Francesco Akira’s IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag titles. 

The NEVER Openweight title is also on the line at today’s event, with WWE’s Karl Anderson defending against Hikuleo. 

A series of tag team matches fill out the undercard, including tag previews of Wrestle Kingdom’s IWGP World Heavyweight and IWGP Junior Heavyweight title matches. 

Our live coverage begins at 4:30 a.m. Eastern time. 

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Alex Zayne and El Lindaman defeated Ryohe Oiwa and Kosei Fujita

This was a fine little opener. Lindaman is always a delightful watch.

Zayne and Oiwa opened up the match, with Zayne gaining an early advantage over the young lion pairing. Lindaman and Zayne lost their advantage after a hot tag to Fujita opened the door for a rally. Zayne brought the comeback to an end after escaping a Boston crab and tagging out to Lindaman. After a short back-and-forth, Lindaman landed a German suplex to bring the opening match to a close.

Shane Haste and Mikey Nicholls (TMDK) defeated Kevin Knight and Kushida

This was a totally forgettable affair.

Kushida and Knight opened the match with a blitz to take the lead early. TMDK slowed the pace to take control, but KUSHIDA turned things back around after a quick tag.

Once Knight was left alone, he tried setting up for something in the corner. TMDK caught him, landed a Tank Buster, and won the match.

Francesco Akira, TJP, Great-O-Khan, & Aaron Henare (United Empire) defeated Gabriel Kidd, Alex Coughlin, Robbie Eagles, & Tiger Mask

The match opened with Coughlin outpowering both junior tag champions before taking TJP to the mat. Eventually, UE overwhelmed the babyfaces by rushing the ring, isolating Eagles from his partners.

A hot tag to Kidd started a turnaround that lasted for some time. TM landed a tiger driver for a nearfall, but UE broke it up and took the match back under their control. After a scramble on the mat, TJP pinned TM to win the match.

Douki, Yoshinobu Kanemaru, Lance Archer, & Minoru Suzuki (Suzuki-gun) defeated EVIL, SHO, Dick Togo, & Yujiro Takahashi (House of Torture)

This was a nothing match, but it was here to get Suzuki in the ring to make his announcement.

This match opened with a brawl. The opening scrap continued until HoT was left alone in the ring with Suzuki; this led to another messy sequence filled with weapons and other chicanery. Somehow, Suzuki emerged from the fog with Togo in a choke. Suzuki then dropped Togo with a Gotch piledriver and won the match.

Suzuki-gun Announcement

After the match, Suzuki took a microphone to make the advertised announcement. Suzuki spoke of the faction’s history and acknowledged the development of its members under the umbrella of Suzuki-gun. To end this somber promo, Suzuki announced the faction would disband at the end of the year.

Titan, Bushi, Sanada, & Tetsuya Naito (Los Ingobernables de Japon) defeated Clark Conners, Ryusuke Taguchi, Taru Yano, & Hiroshi Tanahashi

The main unit team gained a lead early by grouping up on Sanada, but LIJ fought back, storming the ring and isolating Taguchi. Taguchi tried to appease LIJ to no avail. A tag to Tanahashi reversed the flow of the match, which Conners helped to maintain.

The match fell apart, leading to a tope from Titan, taking out the main unit squad. As order returned, Naito and Sanada caught Conners, and Naito hit Destino to win the bout.

Taiji Ishimori, Dick Togo, & Jay White (Bullet Club) defeated Master Wato, Tama Tonga, & Kazuchika Okada

This was a very good match.

Okada and White came to blows early. White pulled Okada to the floor, slamming him into the ring apron and choking him with camera wire. Ishimori helped White in his assault, maintaining the Bullet Club lead after the tag.

The tag finally came to Tama, who reversed the momentum for his team. Bullet Club eventually slipped back into control, forcing a tag to Wato. Wato held his own against Ishimori and Gedo. Wato hit Gedo with the RPP, leading to White hitting the ring and dropping Wato with a balde runner. Okada hit the ring, and White answered with a blade runner for his next challenger. White then dragged the lifeless Gedo over Wato, resulting in a Bullet Club win.

NEVER Openweight Championship: Karl Anderson (c) defeated Hikuleo

Maybe I’m crazy, but I really liked this.

Hikuleo opened the match with a powerbomb. Anderson retreated to the outside, where Hikuleo continued his assault. Hikuleo slammed Anderson into barricades while verbally barraging the defending champion.

On the way back into the ring, Anderson caught Hikuleo with a dragonscrew. With this window now open, Anderson continued his attack on the outside, focusing the leg.

Anderson and Hikuleo traded blows, but Anderson’s leg work kept them even for some time. Once Hikuleo did gain some footing, Gedo hit the ring, but Hikuleo threw his former faction mate into Anderson. Hikuleo then hoisted Anderson for a chokeslam. Anderson reversed the slam into a gun stun, leading to him winning the match and retaining his title.

After the match, Anderson cut a promo declaring himself the greatest NEVER Openweight champion of all time. He then said he would be champion for all of time. Tama Tonga then walked to the ring and began trading strikes with Anderson. Tama tried for a gun stun, but Anderson reversed and hit one of his own. With Tama looking at the ceiling, Anderson announced he would be defending the belt against Tama at the Tokyo Dome.

Super Jr. Tag League Finals: Lio Rush & Yoh defeated Chris Bey & Ace Austin (Bullet Club)

The match opened with a high pace sequence that left Austin and Rush alone in the ring. Bey and Yoh hit the ring as the sequence peaked, leading to a quick scramble for control. Rush and Yoh pulled ahead with intense offense, leading to Bullet Club’s comeback as Yoh tried to calm Rush.

Bullet Club worked to isolate Yoh after gaining the lead. After some time on the back foot, Yoh scored a hot tag. Rush overwhelmed Bey with quick offense. Yoh hit Bey with DMV, setting Rush up for a splash, but Rush couldn’t finish the job.

Rush landed a dive to the floor to take out Bey, but Austin answered with a dive of his own to take out Yoh and Rush. Yoh hit Austin with a backdrop to bring all men to the floor. Once the men returned to their feet in the ring, all four came to blows.

Yoh and Rush tried for a double-team cutter, but the move was reversed, and Rush hit Yoh instead. The Bullet Club pair hit Yoh with heavy offense, but Rush made the save.

Rush and Bey shared an intense moment in the ring before a miscommunication led to Austin dropping Bey with a kick. Yoh and Rush hit their tandem finish, but Bey interrupted the count. Rush hit a tope to take out Bey. Rush then hit a splash from across the ring, setting up Yoh for a direct drive. Yoh hit his finish and pinned Austin to win the match and the tag league trophies.

World Tag League Finals: Yoshi-Hashi & Hirooki Goto (Bishamon) defeated Mark Davis & Kyle Fletcher (Aussie Open)

The match opened with a brawl that left Aussie Open with an early lead. Aussie Open proceeded to work over YH for some time, cutting the ring in half.

After Goto tagged in, things began to turn around for Bishamon. Goto and YH took the fight to the outside. On the floor, Aussie Open retook the lead and set up a table next to the ring.

Back in the ring, Aussie Open commanded the lead, scoring a nearfall of YH after an impressive dive to the floor. Goto interrupted a Borealis with a reverse GTR. The action then made its way to the apron, where Goto landed a GTR on fletcher through the table set up earlier in the match.

After the table spot, YH and Davis were left alone in the ring. YH held his own long enough for Goto to return to the ring. Goto and YH hit a tandem finish, but miraculously, Fletcher recovered in time to break up the pin.

Aussie Open cleared the ring of Goto and flattened YH with some kind of elevated double-team drop for a near fall.

YH fought back into the match with a sudden destroyer and rollup for a near fall. Goto then returned to the fray, dropping Fletcher with a headbutt. Goto hit Davis with a lariat which YH followed with a snap dragon suplex. Bishamon then landed Shoto. Instead of going for the pin, Bishamon followed Shoto with Naraku. YH then pinned Fletcher to win the Tag League and advance to the Tokyo Dome.