Jeff Jarrett talks New Japan sale number being “shockingly low”

It was recently revealed that a major corporate change had taken place as it relates to New Japan Pro Wrestling. Bushiroad recently sold all its shares in NJPW to its broadcast partner TV Asahi and digital media company CyberAgent. The share transfer is valued at approximately 3.6 billion yen, or roughly $22.6 million.

Reacting to the sale of the promotion on his My World podcast, Jeff Jarrett would comment on what he called the “shockingly” low number that the shares were sold for:

“That number to me was shockingly low, but I think it’s very telling in that the live event business has not come back [since the pandemic], they don’t project it’s going to come back anytime in the near future and New Japan World has not created a substantial revenue stream.

I think wrestling again is a priority because we don’t have seasons, we run 52 weeks a year. I’m not saying it’s massive leverage, but it’s leverage, because we create live content every week, weekend, and that rates,. No, you’re not going to get blue chip broadcast advertisers, but it’s up there.”

NJPW shares sale numbers in context

Jarrett is someone that has history when it comes to the worth of promotions and selling to new stakeholders. Double J sold sold his remaining minority stake of TNA to Dixie Carter in 2015, although the amount he got for the sale has never been publicly disclosed.

To put the $22.6 million into context compared to some historic pro wrestling sales/contract deals:

AEW programming leaving NJPW World this summer

The end of AEW TV on NJPW World is coming soon for those in Japan.

Announced Wednesday by NJPW, archive episodes of Dynamite, Collision, Rampage, Battle of the Belts and AEW Now will no longer be available to those in the country after August 31, 2026, when their contract ends.

Starting in late-June, new episodes of Dynamite (June 24) and Collision (June 27) will also cease to be uploaded. There is one exception: the AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door pay-per-views which are “still available for purchase and viewing.” That is assumed to also include next month’s PPV in San Jose, California.

The reason for all this is the MyAEW service which the announcement directed fans toward. The streaming service was created due to the dissolving of AEW’s Triller relationship which gave international fans the ability to watch their weekly TV and buy PPVs.

The content relationship began in April 2022 with episodes of Dynamite and Rampage available at no extra cost to NJPW viewers in Japan.

The news comes on the same day TV Asahi and CyberAgent took full control of NJPW from Bushiroad.

NJPW World reveals five most-viewed matches of 2025

NJPW World has revealed the five most-viewed matches that aired on the streaming service in 2025.

Based on view count from January 1-December 31, 2025, Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd from Wrestle Dynasty was the most-watched match. It took place on January 5 of last year and was Omega’s first time wrestling in Japan since 2023.

Here is the full top five:

  1. Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd from Wrestle Dynasty (January 5, 2025)
  2. IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match: Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Hirooki Goto from New Beginning in Osaka (February 11, 2025)
  3. IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match: Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet from Wrestle Dynasty (January 5, 2025)
  4. IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match: Yota Tsuji vs. Gabe Kidd from New Beginning in Osaka (February 11, 2025)
  5. Dog Pound cage match: David Finlay, Clark Connors, Drilla Moloney, Taiji Ishimori & Gabe Kidd vs. EVIL, Ren Narita, SANADA, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru from Wrestling Dontaku (May 3, 2025)

The Sabre vs. Goto match from New Beginning in Osaka saw Goto finally become IWGP Champion for the first time in his NJPW career, which has spanned more than two decades. Goto was champion for 138 days before dropping the belt back to Sabre.

Tsuji now holds both the IWGP Championship and Global Heavyweight Championship after defeating Konosuke Takeshita at Wrestle Kingdom 20 on January 4. That show was headlined by Hiroshi Tanahashi’s retirement match against Kazuchika Okada, which seems likely to top the 2026 version of this list.

MVP says he ‘invented’ idea for NJPW World

Before New Japan World came into existence, MVP was pushing for NJPW to cater to its English-speaking fans more.

MVP spent two years with NJPW from 2011-2013, wrestling for the company in the early stages of its resurgence. That period saw NJPW start to gain more fans internationally as it became easier to watch the product. NJPW first started to stream pay-per-views and other events on Ustream before launching NJPW World in 2014.

On a new episode of his Marking Out podcast, MVP detailed a meeting he had with NJPW officials where he urged them to find ways to make the product more accessible to fans outside of Japan. MVP felt like NJPW was leaving a lot of money on the table by not having easy ways for international fans to buy merchandise or watch shows.

“Here’s something that is factual. This is an absolute fact — the idea for New Japan World, I pitched to President [Naoki] Sugabayashi long before it became a reality,” MVP said. “I had a meeting with Sugabayashi. He was the president back then. Jado, Gedo, Red Shoes, and Tiger Hattori. And I was telling them, ‘You guys are missing out on a lot of f*cking money. You have a huge English-speaking audience in the United States, in England, in Australia. You’re not marketing to them.’ I said, ‘You guys need a website that has an English translation. You’re not thinking about your audience outside of Japan.’ I said, ‘You need to make your product accessible to English-speaking fans outside the country.’

“I said, ‘You know, what you can do is set up like a YouTube page, you know, but in English, aimed at American fans.’ I said, ‘Pick three matches a week that you want to highlight, put it on the YouTube channel. I’ll help you get two Americans to do the voiceover in English for that match and start feeding your English audience.'”

MVP said he even asked fans on Twitter to let NJPW know how much they wanted more accessibility. There was a strong response from fans who agreed with him.

“So yes, true story. I invented New Japan World,” MVP said. “I pitched that idea to them before it existed. And I don’t know how long it took from the time we talked about it until it actually came to fruition, but I’m the one that suggested that they do that.”

Wrestling for NJPW was a dream for MVP, who left WWE so that he could compete in Japan. He later returned to WWE and is now with AEW, where he recently signed a new contract. He is part of The Hurt Syndicate with Bobby Lashley and Shelton Benjamin.

Update on English content available on NJPW World

NJPW World has made it easier for English-speaking fans to learn about the promotion’s early history.

NJPW announced on Monday that English introductions and historical context have been added to its archive, covering matches from the promotion’s launch in 1972 through the spring of 1983.

“English introductions and historical context has now been added across our archives up through the spring of 1983- go on dozens of deep dives now with @velvetvoiceWS!” NJPW wrote on social media.

“I’ve been hard at work in my home studio!” Walker Stewart wrote in response to the news.

Fans can now select the alternate English commentary track in the settings menu for matches from that era.

Stewart also serves as the English commentary voice for Stardom, a role he began just over a year ago. The next Stardom event scheduled to feature English commentary is set for September 27 at Korakuen Hall, headlined by a title vs. title match featuring NJPW Strong Women’s Champion AZM vs. World of Stardom Champion Saya Kamitani.

NJPW World launching ‘new features and improvements’ this fall

New Japan Pro Wrestling has announced some significant upgrades are coming to its streaming service, NJPW World, this fall.  

The new service will include apps for iOS, Android, and Roku TV. Video on the service will be upgraded to full HD and users will also have the ability to download content to watch offline. Search functions will also be improved. 

The price for the service is increasing from ¥999 JPY ($6.82 USD) per month to ¥1,298 JPY ($8.86 USD) per month. It is expected to debut this fall. However, an exact release date for the new streaming service has yet to be announced. 

“The new price point will come into effect at the next payment date after the renewal. Those who wish to unsubscribe or delete their accounts must do so before that date. The first payment date under the new plan will be announced at a later time,” NJPW1972.com reads. 

Returning subscribers will not need to re-register for the new service. Their payments will automatically be increased to the new price. Pay-per-view content previously purchased by users will automatically transfer over to the new service. 

NJPW World’s current app on Amazon Fire TV app will no longer be supported following the debut of the new service, but a new app will be made available for download. Customers being billed through Amazon will have their subscription payments canceled in the coming days. 

Interpromotional All Star Junior Festival announced for NJPW World PPV

An interpromotional junior heavyweight event is set to air on NJPW World pay-per-view. 

NJPW announced today that Hiromu Takahashi will produce All Star Junior Festival on Wednesday, March 1 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. 

According to its announcement, tickets for the show are already on sale, plus the event will air for a global audience on NJPW World pay-per-view.

All of Japan’s largest men’s promotions will contribute talent for the event, as will CMLL from Mexico. 

No specific matches or stars have been announced for the show to this point. 

The promotions involved will be: 

  • 2AW
  • 666 Pro Wrestling
  • All Japan Pro Wrestling
  • Big Japan Pro Wrestling
  • CMLL
  • DDT Pro Wrestling
  • DRADITION
  • Dragon Gate
  • Ganbare Pro Wrestling
  • GLEAT
  • Just Tap Out
  • Kyushu Pro Wrestling
  • Michinoku Pro Wrestling
  • New Japan Pro Wrestling
  • Osaka Pro Wrestling
  • PANCRASE MISSION
  • Pro Wrestling BASARA
  • Pro Wrestling FREEDOMS
  • Pro Wrestling NOAH
  • Pro Wrestling SECRET BASE
  • Pro Wrestling ZERO1
  • Ryuukyuu Dragon Pro Wrestling

NJPW wrote: 

Produced by Hiromu Takahashi, March 1 will see an incredible event on NJPW World pay per view, powered by LEC!

It’s the first ever All Star Junior Festival in Korakuen Hall! Junior heavyweights from across the world, independent to major leagues will all be in action on a once in a lifetime card!

Wrestle Kingdom 17 sets viewership record for NJPW World

NJPW announced Thursday night that Wrestle Kingdom 17 pulled in record numbers for their NJPW World streaming service.

The company stated that 92,409 unique worldwide users watched the Wednesday event live with 30% of the viewership (nearly 28,000) coming from outside the country and watching the English feed.

They stated that the overall number is a record for the service which has been in operation since 2014. While they thanked their existing and new users, they did not announce how many new signups they received.

Held at the Tokyo Dome, the annual event drew an announced 26,085. It was co-headlined by IWGP World Champion Jay White defending against Kazuchika Okada and IWGP U.S. Champion Will Ospreay defending against the returning Kenny Omega in addition to the anticipated debut appearance of Mercedes Mone (the former Sasha Banks).

Those without NJPW World can watch matches from Wrestle Kingdom 17 via NJPW’s weekly TV show on AXS TV starting Thursday, January 12th.

NJPW Strong results: Jay White & Karl Anderson vs. Wheeler Yuta & Homicide

Tonight saw the first of NJPW Strong’s Autumn Attack tapings from Las Vegas, Nevada.

Shota Umino defeated QT Marshall

Umino got his full-on babyface crash course from QT Marshall in tonight’s opening bout, babyface vs. heel 101 between these two.

Usually, Marshall doesn’t do anything in the ring that I’d call out of the ordinary, but he is consistently good at eliciting negative responses from crowds. Though this always comes across better live, and it always seems to drag on television because NJPW’s production quality isn’t able to capture how loudly the crowd reacts. This style of wrestling is better in a live setting than on NJPWWorld, for sure.

Marshall earned a close two-count after a Golden Star Bomb, just like Kota Ibushi does. I’m sure people will love to read that. Umino hit a tombstone piledriver and later, he’d pick up the win after hitting the Death Rider on Marshall.

*****

JR Kratos and Danny Limelight from Team Filthy came out next. Limelight got on the mic and trashed the people of Vegas and called out “cherry boys” Aussie Open, who are current STRONG Openweight Tag Team champions. The crowd gave them a lot of heat during the promo. When Kratos grabbed the mic to speak, the mic seemed to have been cut out, so the fans started chanting “We can’t hear you!” What’s funny was that Kratos has such a powerful voice that I did, in fact, hear him, even though it was through the screen.

Kratos eventually got the mic working again and re-emphasized what Limelight said, that they essentially were owed a shot at the titles since they were in NJPW Strong and grinding far longer than some outsider team. Aussie Open then appeared on the entrance ramp and nodded in approval of they and Team Filthy squaring off for the titles in the future.

Ren Narita defeated Juice Robinson via disqualification

The “Rock Hard” one ambushed Narita on the entrance ramp as he was on his way to the ring. The ring announcer was barely into his match call when Robinson appeared, so Narita took a lengthy pre-match beating.

When the bell rang, Robinson continued beating the hell out of Narita at ringside. He even at one point grabbed the ring bell and hit Narita with it. Actually, right before that, the referee tried taking the bell out of Robinson’s hands but Robinson shoved him into the guardrail.

Soon after all this, the ref called the match and awarded the win to Narita via disqualification. Narita was covered in blood by this point.

“You shouldn’t have called me out on the internet, Narita!” Robinson said. He then proceeded to cut a pretty blue promo on Narita for calling him out (despite being a lower ranked wrestler in the NJPW system), and at the end of it, he basically offered Narita to restart the match, but as a no-DQ match. A bloodied-up Narita demanded the ref restart the match, and we were back on. Bloody Narita vs. “Rock Hard” Robinson in a no-disqualification rules match.

Ren Narita defeated Juice Robinson via submission in a no disqualification match

There was a great visual of Narita having Robinson locked in a figure four, all blood all over his face. Robinson hit Narita with a kendo stick a number of times, to the point where the stick split apart and hit the announcers at the commentary table. Ian Riccaboni even mentioned he got hit by a piece of the stick, and both announcers claimed they got some of Narita’s blood on them.

Robinson later started biting Narita’s bloody head. People in the crowd began chanting “You sick f*ck!” at Robinson, who pointed out a fan and mouthed “This is YOUR fault” before removing his belt and whipping Narita with it. Robinson is damn good in this role.

Robinson hit the Left Hand from God for two. Narita responded later by tossing Robinson a chair, then using a single-foot dropkick into the chair, smashing Robinson in the face with the chair he was holding. Narita laid in a number of elbows before Robinson was able to reverse the offensive momentum. He then grabbed a chair and stuck it in between the middle and top rope in the blue corner, but when he tried to throw Narita into it, Narita reversed the Irish whip and slammed Robinson head first into it instead.

Narita unfolded the steel chair next and used a single-arm suplex on Robinson, sending him crashing onto the chair. Narita continued hitting Robinson with the chair, but Robinson was able to catch Narita with a low blow before spiking him head-first onto the mangled chair for a very close count of two. Ten minutes had passed at this point, and the pace slowed between spots.

Finally, Robinson power bombed Narita through a table on the outside, which got a “Holy shit!” & “This is awesome!” chant from the crowd. Robinson rolled Narita back into the ring for a pin but only scored another two-count. The house energy dipped a lot from here. The crowd started chanting about wanting tables. Robinson obliged and grabbed the ring announcer’s table and threw it into the ring.

When Robinson attempted an avalanche Death Valley Bomb through a table, Narita was able to slide out of the fireman’s carry hold and slapped on a sleeper lock. This forced Robinson to come down from the top rope to attempt blocking the submission hold. Narita eventually transitioned from a sleeper to an escalera double-shoulder lock from standing rear mount, which he cranked on until Robinson tapped. Narita grabbed the win and looked awesome in doing it. Despite this going a little too long, both Robinson and Narita did a hell of a job, and I think both came out of this looking stronger and more interesting.

Bullet Club (Jay White & Karl Anderson) defeated Homicide & Wheeler Yuta

“Filthy” Tom Lawlor joined the English announce team for this one. He ended up getting into a scuffle with Homicide a few minutes into the match, with Homicide spitting water in Lawlor’s face.

White got a bloody shiner in this, with some blood visible from under his left eye.

Yuta tagged back in at around the ten-minute mark and cleaned house. Minutes later, the finish saw White hit Homicide with a Blade Runner while Homicide was distracted by Tom Lawlor, who jumped the guardrail. Doc Gallows kept referee Jeremy Marcus distracted as White laid the aforementioned Bladerunner on Homicide for the win.

After the match, chaos ensued: Lawlor came into the ring and attacked Homicide. White joined in. Yuta beat on Lawlor to defend his partner. Soon after, West Coast Wrecking Crew arrived and began beating on Yuta. Shota Umino also arrived too and would end up getting beaten on. White got on the microphone and asked Tim Filthy to “remove the trash from the ring,” referring to Homicide. He scolded fans for chanting for Jon Moxley and said he wouldn’t be showing up tonight. He also said that Eddie Kingston, who was supposed to face White in Las Vegas, got “butterflies” which is why Kingston didn’t appear (Kingston actually contracted COVID-19, which is why he had to miss the show). White hinted that maybe he’d come to meet him instead, at NJPW’s upcoming event there, Rumble on 44th St.

Afterwards, “Filthy” Tom got on the mic and addressed his hometown crowd in Las Vegas. He said Team Filthy has been carrying NJPW Strong. He then got the audience to do a “NJPW Strong” call-and-response before saying “Ganbatte! [Do your best]”! A pretty babyface promo considering what’s just gone on in the ring. Will this lead to more Bullet Club + Team Filthy team-ups in the future?

Final thoughts:

This was a decent episode of Strong, though it did feel like it dragged at times. The hardcore match was good, but it could have been chopped by five minutes; also, while the main event was good, the crowd sounded exhausted. If this were in front of a NJPW crowd in Japan, or on an AEW taping, this would have turned out much differently, and the energy would have been a lot higher. Like with any other promotion taping a series of shows in a row at a single event, NJPW Strong tapings exhaust fans, and that often impacts the overall perception of the show itself and its main events. Fussiness aside, this was a fine extended edition of NJPW Strong.

‘The Forbidden Door’ documentary coming to NJPW World

A documentary on AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door is coming soon to NJPW World. 

On Wednesday, New Japan posted a teaser for the film featuring comments from William Regal, Chris Jericho, Tony Schiavone, and Kazuchika Okada.

“COMING SOON to @njpwworld: With exclusive interviews and incredible behind the scenes footage, a new documentary looks at “Forbidden Door”s of the past, present and future,” NJPW tweeted

Hiroshi Tanahashi, Sting, and Shingo Takagi are also listed as having participated in the documentary. 

While NJPW is advertising the film as “Coming Soon” an exact date it will be available on the streaming service has yet to be announced. 

AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door took place on June 26 from the United Center in Chicago. The show did an estimated 125,000-127,000 buys on pay-per-view. AEW President Tony Khan has stated that the event brought in more than $5 million in pay-per-view sales and $1 million in ticket sales. 

NJPW Strong results: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Chris Dickinson

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ariya Daivari defeated Delirious

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

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

Brody King defeated Jake Something

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

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

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

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

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

Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Chris Dickinson

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Final thoughts:

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

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

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

AEW Dynamite and Rampage now available on NJPW World in Japan

Episodes of AEW Dynamite and Rampage have started to be made available on NJPW World in Japan.

Last Friday, it was announced that episodes of Dynamite and Rampage would be coming to NJPW World in Japan soon. The Wednesday, April 6 edition of Dynamite and Friday, April 8 edition of Rampage have now been uploaded.

English commentary versions of the shows will be uploaded a few days after they air in the United States, while Japanese commentary versions will be uploaded after the commentary is recorded. Commentator Haruo Murata and NJPW star Shingo Takagi are the Japanese commentary team for the Dynamite episode that’s available.

The AEW content is region-locked and only available to users in Japan. It’s offered at no additional cost to NJPW World subscribers.

After the announcement that Dynamite and Rampage were coming to NJPW World was made, AEW president and CEO Tony Khan tweeted: “We did it.”

A working relationship between AEW and NJPW has existed since February 2021. On this week’s episode of Dynamite, NJPW star Minoru Suzuki will defend his Ring of Honor Television title against Samoa Joe.

AEW Dynamite and Rampage coming to NJPW World in Japan

The relationship between AEW and NJPW has taken another step forward.

It was announced on Friday that weekly episodes of AEW Dynamite and Rampage will be coming to NJPW World in Japan soon. The AEW content is being added at no additional cost to NJPW World subscribers.

AEW’s Tony Khan responded to NJPW World’s announcement: “We did it.”

NJPW commentator Chris Charlton noted that it’s a regional deal for Japan only.

A working relationship between AEW and NJPW has existed since February 2021, when KENTA showed up on Dynamite as part of a feud with Jon Moxley for the IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship.

When NJPW talent has appeared in AEW during the working relationship between the two companies, their matches have been uploaded to NJPW World.

The “Forbidden Door” between AEW and NJPW opened again when Jay White appeared on Dynamite this February and defeated Trent Beretta on an episode of Rampage.

NJPW’s Minoru Suzuki wrestled at ROH Supercard of Honor last week, defeating Rhett Titus to win the ROH TV title. Supercard of Honor was the first ROH show since Khan bought the promotion.

NJPW Strong results: Buddy Matthews vs. Ren Narita

Tonight was the third installment of the NJPW Strong: Rivals tapings from Hollywood.

Fred Yehi, Keita & the DKC defeated Stray Dog Army (Bateman, Misterioso & Barrett Brown)

So a few of the audience members down in front thought Barrett Brown looked like Shawn Michaels and started chanting “H-B-K!” at him. Brown did the HBK pose for them and got a nice ovation for it. Barrett Brown is a man of the people.

Stray Dog Army started to double and triple team DKC halfway through the match. Respect to DKC here, as this was his second match of the night at the tapings. He was eventually able to tag out to partner Fred Yehi, who’d launch Brown with a release German suplex. Misterioso ran into the ring and Yehi gave him an exploder suplex.

Brown was back in moments later and caught Keita with a half-and-half suplex. The DKC then caught Brown with a diving crescent kick off the top rope. Yehi clipped Bateman’s knee. Misterioso landed an Asai moonsault to the floor, which the crowd followed up with a “holy shit!” chant.

Back in the ring, Yehi connected with a spinning back palm strike and a fisherman’s suplex on Brown for the pin. Bateman and Yehi clashed afterwards and had a staredown in the middle of the ring. They started jaw-jacking, then Yehi posed for the crowd and went to the back. I imagine we’ll see these two face off sometime in the near future.

Chris Bey defeated Blake Christian

Bey was pretty over with the Hollywood crowd. Christian missed a cannonball to the floor but landed on his feet. Bey dropkicked Christian into the guardrail.

Blake Christian got booed at points in the match. When Bey held him in a submission hold, they chanted at Christian to tap.

They exchanged a lot of quick combinations. Christian connected with a tilt-a-whirl gutbuster and a splash for two. Bey landed a diving elbow drop across the back of Christian, who was draped over the middle rope. Bey hit Finnex, his torture rack-to-neckbreaker, but Christian kicked out at two.

Christian used a ripcord Spanish Fly and springboard 450 splash to the center of the ring but only earned a two-count for his troubles. Christian attempted another 450 splash but landed on his feet when he saw Bey move. Bey then caught Christian with an inside cradle for another nearfall.

The finish saw Christian go for a moonsault but Bey connected with the Art of Finesse, or a cutter, for the win. I was confused at first because it sort of looked like Christian connected with a moonsault. But yes, Bey is your winner.

A Clark Connors promo aired next where he said he was going to take out STRONG Openweight Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor at Strong Style Evolved in Tampa, FL.

Buddy Matthews defeated Ren Narita

This was an excellent main event.

There were a couple of pockets of fans in the crowd chanting for Matthews while he was on his way to the ring. He and Ren Narita went hold for hold on the mat, which really had a cat-and-mouse dynamic, with Matthews initiating holds and Narita escaping out of them. More fans chanted “BUD-DY! BUD-DY!” as he held Narita in control in the middle of the ring.

At one point, Narita closed in on Matthews with a low kick that could have taken Matthews’ head off, but Matthews dodged it. Narita then offered his hand to Matthews, an offer to help him up. Matthews took him up on the offer, but he didn’t let go of Narita’s hand once they were up. They talked a bit of trash and got into each other’s faces until Matthews pulled Narita’s wrist in for a go-behind grab. They went through a number of standing switches. When Narita again escaped Matthews’ hold, he gave him a stiff, patronizing pat on the shoulder. Gutsy move, as Jesse Ventura would say.

Matthews approached Narita as he stood on the apron. Narita leaned over and tried headbutting Mathews in the stomach, but Matthews caught him with a front facelock and drilled him into the mat with a DDT. He stared Narita down in a patronizing pose of his own, cross-legged and arms folded, just like Narita’s mentor, Katsuyori Shibata. This looked to have fired Narita up. Matthews punted him in the back with a penalty kick. Narita insisted on another. Matthews gave him four, but Narita wouldn’t budge. Matthews smacked Narita in the back of the head. Narita responded by standing up. Matthews chopped him and stomped on his toe. Narita unloaded a combo of strikes and kicks in the corner. He caught Matthews off the ropes and threw him with an overhead suplex. Narita earned a two-count after a running elbow and single-arm suplex.

They traded forearms on the apron. Matthews lifted Narita in a fireman’s carry, but Narita slipped out the back and slapped on a sleeperhold from inside the ring; Matthews was still stuck on the apron. Narita released the hold, then blasted Matthews in the chest with hard kicks.

Matthews bounced off the ropes and went for another PK but Narita held onto Matthews’ leg and rolled through into a single-leg crab. Matthews tried kicking Narita off, but Narita held on and put him in a figure-four leglock until Matthews grabbed the bottom rope for a break. The match had just gone past the ten-minute mark by this point.

Matthews laid Narita out with a running front kick. When Matthews climbed to the top rope, Narita had already gotten up and threw elbows at Matthews, who was perched on the turnbuckle. Narita went for a superplex but Matthews escaped and landed three Cheeky Nandos kicks to a prone Narita before Matthews power bombed Narita twice for two separate nearfalls. Matthews hit a curb stomp to Narita for a very close two that the crowd gasped at, then started cheering for. They started chanting “holy shit!” and “this is awesome!”

After Matthews began laying in repeated elbow strikes, referee Jeremy Marcus stepped in to make sure Narita was all right and was able to continue the match. Before Marcus was finished checking on Narita, Matthews shoved the ref out of the way and went after Narita, who clawed at Matthews feet. The fifteen-minute call sounded. Matthews repaid Narita with a patronizing pat on the shoulder followed by a knee to the face. He then hit Murphy’s Law for the emphatic win. Great match.

Final thoughts:

Go out of your way to see the main event, if possible. Narita is advanced beyond his years. Matthews looks massive and moves like he’s Narita’s size. This was physical but also told a clear story. In the end, Narita bit off a little more than he could chew, but Matthews might have gotten a little more than he bargained for.

NJPW Strong results: FinJuice vs. JONAH & Bad Dude Tito

NJPW Strong: Rivals kicked off tonight in Hollywood. Ian Riccaboni is still subbing for regular NJPW Strong announcer Kevin Kelly, who is calling the New Japan Cup overseas this month.

TJP defeated Brogan Finlay via submission

TJP has a new look and vibe now since he joined United Empire. He goes by “The Public Enemy” and has longer hair and updated ring gear.

Newcomer Brogan Finlay, son of Fit and brother of David, got bullied by TJP. TJP gave Finlay a rough Otani-style face wash in the corner. Later in the match, Finlay channeled his father, Fit, and used a fireman’s carry roll on TJP, which earned him a two-count.

Towards the finish, Finlay decked TJP with a lariat, but both were down for the count. The crowd then started a 60–40 chant in favor of TJP. In the end, TJP connected with a Mamba Splash to Finlay’s back before locking in a modified STF. A number of fans were chanting “Tap! Tap!” at Finlay before he tapped out.

Afterwards, TJP got on the mic and called the crowd a bunch of “Silver Lake 5s” before stating that he is the best junior heavyweight alive. He explained how he’d already won the IMPACT X-Division and WWE Cruiserweight championships in the past, and that when he’d win the IWGP junior heavyweight title he’d be the first-ever “Triple Crown” junior heavyweight.

Before he was finished talking, a video flashed across the monitors with the phrase “KING OF THE ROPES” on it, and Mascara Dorada appeared at the ring entrance. He’s formerly known as Gran Metallik from WWE 205 Live and appeared in the WWE Cruiserweight Classic along with TJP. He got in TJP’s face. They got into it for a second, but TJP slipped out to the floor. Mascara Dorada teased diving onto TJP but instead bounced off the ropes and did a backflip onto his feet. It looks like these two will square off sometime this year on NJPW Strong.

Christopher Daniels defeated Karl Fredericks

This kicked ass. Seriously.

Fredericks was filling in for Gabriel Kidd, who was originally scheduled to wrestle Christopher Daniels.

Daniels offered his hand to Fredericks, who declined.

The crowd was pumped for this one. The two had a great exchange on the mat early on, building slowly to bigger and bigger spots. When Fredericks was gaining ground on offense, Daniels cut him off with a flapjack. He then suplexed the larger Fredericks in the air and brought him down gut-first onto his knee.

Daniels lit Fredericks up with chops. The crowd enjoyed his fire. They loved Daniels as well, and many fans kept shouting “SCU!” at him throughout the match. It wasn’t like this when Daniels faced Jay White at the same venue three months ago, there appeared to be different kinds of fans at this taping.

Fredericks landed a Shibata-style low dropkick, but Daniels responded later with a perfect Blue Thunder bomb. I don’t think I’m doing it justice in this write-up, but the smoothness and chemistry these two had with each other was excellent.

Daniels went for Angel’s Wings but Fredericks reversed it. When Fredericks missed a Stinger Splash in the corner, Daniels laid him out with a standing uranage before sticking a picture-perfect double-jump moonsault on the “Alpha Wolf” for the impressive win in just under ten minutes. For a TV match on a one-hour show, it doesn’t get much better than this. Quality stuff, people.

Daniels grabbed the mic and called Fredericks “a tough son of a bitch.” He said Fredericks had made both the LA Dojo and Mr. Shibata proud, and that if he ever wanted to run the match back he gladly would since Daniels thinks he’s “the future of this business.”

The two shook hands and Daniels thanked the crowd before both headed to the back.

JONAH & Bad Dude Tito defeated FinJuice (David Finlay & Juice Robinson)

Both teams brawled at the start. We saw a very “no-nonsense” version of FinJuice, or more so than usual, I guess. Juice connected with a big spinebuster that flattened Bad Dude Tito, then crashed into Tito with a running cannonball in the corner.

When Robinson went for a plancha onto the floor, JONAH caught him mid-air, then slammed him back-first against the ring post.

The finish saw FinJuice go for a Doomsday Device on Tito, but JONAH crotched Finlay on the top turnbuckle, then distracted referee Jeremy Marcus to keep him on the opposite side of the ring. With the ref’s back turned, Shane Haste, who is most recently known as Slapjack from WWE, dashed to the ring from out of nowhere to give Robinson a deadlift Tiger-into-backdrop suplex and disappear. Bad Dude Tito then dove off the top ropes with a frog splash that put Robinson away; Tito & JONAH are your winners.

Shane Haste came back to the ring to celebrate with the two. Haste tossed Robinson out of the ring. David Finlay ran back into the ring and started brawling with all three before they cornered him and took him out as well. Little brother Brogan Finlay, who we caught in the first match earlier on the show, arrived to help out but instead got mauled by JONAH, who crushed him with two big splashes off the top rope, as Tito and Haste held David Finlay on the ground, forcing him to watch JONAH destroy his younger brother. They didn’t formally announce it on the show but this faction seems as though it’ll be the latest iteration of TMDK, the group that Mikey Nicholls was also a member of. He’s the long-time tag team partner of Shane Haste and has been working sporadically for NJPW in recent years.

Final thoughts:

This was a great hour of pro wrestling. I thought Christopher Daniels vs. Karl Fredericks was the stand-out match, but the main event tag team brawl was really good as well and I think myself and many others would like to see more of this FinJuice vs. TMDK feud play out. But Daniels and Fredericks was outstanding, especially for a match that didn’t even go ten minutes.

Next week’s episode features another “U S of Jay” challenge match, plus Kevin Blackwood in his NJPW Strong debut vs. Ariya Daivari, and Bullet Club’s Hikuleo vs. Young Lion Kevin Knight in the opener.