NJPW Road to Tokyo Dome results: Wrestle Kingdom 20 go-home show

The penultimate match in Hiroshi Tanahashi’s legendary career takes place on today’s NJPW Road to Tokyo Dome, the go-home show for Wrestle Kingdom 20.

Tanahashi faces Kosei Fujita in the main event singles match today, the last step before his retirement match against Kazuchika Okada at Wrestle Kingdom 20 in Tokyo Dome set for Sunday, January 4.

Today’s show in Korakuen Hall in Tokyo kicks off with an NJPW World TV title defense from El Phantasmo in an open challenge against a mystery opponent.

In between the opener and the main event, five tag bouts comprise the undercard:

  • Yota Tsuji, Yuto-Ice, and OSKAR vs. Zack Sabre Jr., Ryohei Oiwa, and Hartley Jackson
  • Three-way tag: SHO and DOUKI vs. El Desperado and KUUKAI vs. Taiji Ishimori and Daiki Nagai
  • Shingo Takagi, Hiromu Takahashi, and Gedo vs. Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman, and Jakob Austin Young
  • Shota Umino, Yuya Uemura, Toru Yano, YOH, and Master Wato vs. EVIL, SANADA, Ren Narita, Yujiro Takahashi, and Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI, and Boltin Oleg vs. Taichi, Satoshi Kojima, and Tiger Mask

**********

Main Card

El Phantasmo defeated Ryusuke Taguchi for the NJPW World Television Championship

Phantasmo easily found himself on the winning side of the early lock-ups. He casually watched, aloof, as Taguchi ran the ropes before tripping him. They exchanged brutal, sluggishly slow chops, ending in an Atomic Drop from one man to another.

Teasing a plodding Brainbuster, Phantasmo instead found he and Taguchi speeding things up with a series of Three Amigos. A Rolling Cradle across the mat left both men dizzied; Taguchi hit an elevated dropkick on nothing.

Taguchi exposed his rear end for his Funky Weapon moves, obscured effectively, thanks to expert camerawork. Phantasmo won the match, reversing Taguchi’s roll-up for one of his own.

Post-match: Phantasmo declared that his upcoming match for the NJPW World Television Championship would be on the line in an open challenge. Santa Claus emerged, handing Phantasmo a present. In it sat a puppet that signified DDT Pro Wrestling’s Chris Brookes. Surely enough, Brookes slid into the ring, attacking Phantasmo, Santa Claus, and someone dressed as a reindeer. He accepted Phantasmo’s challenge.

(There’s nothing wrong with a little comedy to start the show. My favorite spot was Taguchi running the ropes under Phantasmo’s encouragement.)

Bishamon (Hirooki Goto & YOSHI-HASHI) & Oleg Boltin defeated Team 100 (Satoshi Kojima & Taichi) & Tiger Mask

Goto and YOSHI-HASHI dispatched Taichi early, and they aligned with Boltin with a flurry of fists on Tiger Mask’s back. Kojima and Boltin made hot tags, soon leading to a passionate series of rapid-fire chest chops to the Kazakh wrestler. YOSHI-HASHI returned, unleashing his own chops to wear down Kojima. He replied with a Koji-Cutter.

Tiger Mask became too much for his opponents, especially with dropkicks, but was left stunned by a Boltin Shake. Bishamon held Tiger Mask horizontal in the air for a Boltin Splash in coordination with their partner for the pinfall.

Post-match: Tensions came to a boiling point between Kojima and Taichi, but Tomohiro Ishii joined them in the ring, imploring them to see reason. They obliged and shook hands.

(Fun match with some hard-hitters. The boys led an intense trio’s hoss fight. If you like big meaty men slapping meat, this is the match for you.)

House Of Torture (EVIL, Ren Narita, SANADA, Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Yujiro Takahashi) defeated Master Wato, Shota Umino, Toru Yano, YOH & Yuya Uemura

YOH and Yano momentarily halted House of Torture’s predictable ambush after the bell, but an exposed turnbuckle via EVIL agonized YOH after an Irish Whip. Narita also took advantage of the turnbuckle by hurling YOH into it once more. SANADA lay tied up following YOH stealing his Paradise Lock.

Wato briefly dominated Narita, but the House of Torture swarmed him and struck with their Dick-to-Dick Contact, courtesy of Dick Togo. Aaron Wolfe tried coming to their aid, but EVIL annihilated him with the NEVER Openweight Championship. Narita whacked the lifeless Wato with a push-up board and stole the pinfall.

Post-match: Kaisei Takechi of DDT Pro-Wrestling came to Uemura and Umino’s aid, warding off the House of Torture.

United Empire (Callum Newman, Great-O-Khan & Jakob Austin Young) defeated Gedo, Hiromu Takahashi & Shingo Takagi

United Empire brawled with Gedo, Takahashi, and Takagi on the outside. Khan, in particular, haunted Takagi with a chair as he lay in the rubble of audience chairs. Back in the ring, Newman and Young bullied Gedo. However, Gedo fired back with a Spinning Backfist. Further isolating him from Takagi and Takahashi, United Empire took turns brutalizing him. A Pumping Bomber from Takagi gave Gedo a 2-count over Young. United Empire rebounded in a united front, with Newman maliciously devastating Gedo with David Finlay’s Overkill for the win.

Post-match: Newman kicked at Takagi and Gedo’s bodies and left with a smug grin as Takahashi charged towards him. The lights went dark as Andrade El Idolo appeared in a pre-taped video promo as the first X in the United Empire in their war against the War Dogs.

(A brief beatdown, more than anything else. I was thinking that Newman would be a fantastic leader for the United Empire as he’s grown into his role. However, if Andrade continues to be a player in NJPW, he could very well be the group’s face.)

House Of Torture (DOUKI & SHO) defeated El Desperado & Kuukai and Daiki Nagai & Taiji Ishimori

All four of House of Torture’s opponents had had enough of SHO’s pre-match smack-talking preamble, teaming up on him and DOUKI. Kuukai almost had DOUKI in a modified Bow and Arrow, but Ishimori and Nagai intercepted. Nagai and Ishimori disputed with Desperado and Kuukai when both teams learned that House of Torture was attempting to escape.

Following a skirmish outside, Kuukai and Ishimori competed with top rope moonsaults outside. Desperado hoped for a tope suicida, only for Nagai to thwart him with a Spinebuster. Ishimori tackled DOUKI in the corner before hurling him at Nagai for another Spinebuster. Outside, Ishimori played equalizer as Nagai dragged DOUKI to the middle of the ring for a Boston Crab. Panicking, DOUKI pulled the match’s referee in so he couldn’t tap. SHO struck Nagai with a sheet pan, handing the pinfall to DOUKI.

(This was the type of pulse-pounding, high-octane thriller that only the junior heavyweights of this caliber can pull off. I was on the edge of my seat.)

Knockout Brothers (OSKAR & Yuto-Ice) & Yota Tsuji defeated TMDK (Hartley Jackson, Ryohei Oiwa & Zack Sabre Jr.)

Yuto-Ice and Sabre threatened to compromise the match with their heated rivalry intensifying. OSKAR and Oiwa started the match in highly physical action. Elsewhere, Yuto-Ice and Sabre brawled at ringside. Tsuji whipped Jackson into the blue steel barricade. Tsuji chopped Oiwa so hard that he collapsed to the mat. Yuto-Ice rocked Oiwa with a Bomboclat and knocked Sabre off the ring apron.

Despite OSKAR’s size and strength, Sabre was ready with strikes. OSKAR failed a leg drop—to painful effect—resulting in a Penalty Kick. OSKAR caught a second Penalty Kick, which he countered into a powerslam. Jackson refused Tsuji’s advances to pick him up, instead toppling him with a lariat. A senton backfired on Jackson, as Tsuji’s raised knees took the brunt of his mack.

Oiwa and Sabre intercepted OSKAR, rotating his arms and shoulders, for naught, as the tall German clotheslined both of them. Jackson rerouted Tsuji’s Gene Blaster with a piledriver. Tsuji attempted another Gene Blaster, which proved a successful gambit. He pinned Jackson for the 3-count.

Post-match: The Knockout Brothers, unsatisfied with their win, beat up Sabre and Oiwa before kicking one of their trophies from the ring apron, breaking it.

(The vibes between ZSJ and Oiwa against the Knock-Out Brothers were so volatile that their matches led to some physical and nasty confrontations on the Road to Tokyo Dome shows. This contrasted nicely with the more focused mentalities of Tsuji and Jackson, who didn’t share the intense feelings as everyone else but had a gripping last stretch of the match.)

Main Event

Hiroshi Tanahashi defeated Kosei Fujita

Fujita gained an early advantage with a dive to Tanahashi outside. He continued his dominion over The Ace by pressing his legs into him in the corner. Tanahashi slammed a comeback after a top-rope senton. Following a prolonged period of dominance from Fujita courtesy of a Springboard Dropkick and a nasty hold, Tanahashi fought back, eventually sinking in a deep Texas Cloverleaf.

Keeping his momentum, Tanahashi hurled Fujita about with a Twist and Shout and a Slingblade before missing a High-Fly Flow. Fujita drew on this for a bridging suplex. Another Slingblade from the Ace moved into a suplex attempt, to which Tanahashi had to modify into a Straightjacket Suplex. Two High-Fly Flows later, and Tanahashi secured the pinfall over Fujita.

Post-match: Tanahashi thanked Fujita for the match, who left Korakuen Hall in low spirits. The Ace proceeded to thank the crowd and instructed El Phantasmo (who was on English commentary with Chris Charlton) to lead the wave across the arena. Sending the crowd home happy with his signature air guitar spot, he noticed the litany of posters in fans’ hands that had his face and name on them and tearfully thanked the fans in attendance.

(Tanahashi’s previous three matches, including this one, were so distinct from one another. The Hiromu Takahashi match felt like a contemporary homage to the 2010s, whereas the El Desperado hearkened to the more terrifying bouts with monster heels and ruthless killers in his career. What sets Kosei Fujita apart for me was his underdog performance in tonight’s bout. While the torch wasn’t passed, Fujita came out of this with some star power in pushing Tanahashi to his limit.)

Final Thoughts

The Andrade El Idolo surprise was a shocker but a welcome one. I’d have expected him to join The Unaffiliated, but since Andrade was previously associated with AEW’s Don Callis Family, perhaps that tie with Kyle Fletcher lent itself to United Empire? There’s quite a bit to untangle there, honestly.

The Chris Brookes angle was nice, too. I’m looking forward to that one. DDT Pro Wrestling is getting some love with the representation they’re getting at Wrestle Kingdom. Other than that, the only feuds heading into Wrestle Kingdom that I’d say were capitalized well on were EVIL and Aaron Wolfe’s bout, in addition to Yuto-Ice’s ongoing war with Zack Sabre Jr.

Tomohiro Ishii returning for NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20

An injury has kept him sidelined for a couple of months now, but Tomohiro Ishii will be back in time for NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20.

It’s been revealed that Ishii will have a spot on the Tokyo Dome card in the multi-team ranbo match for the NEVER Openweight Tag Team titles. He’ll be teaming up with Taichi & Satoshi Kojima. There was dissension between those two at Friday’s Road to Tokyo Dome event, but Kojima still volunteered himself to team with Taichi & Ishii in the ranbo.

This will be Ishii’s first match back since suffering a dislocated right shoulder while competing for AEW in October.

YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano are defending their NEVER Six-Man Tag Team titles in the ranbo. It’s a tornado match where eliminations can occur via pinfall, submission, or being thrown over the top rope. Once one member from a team is out, the whole team is eliminated.

Among the other teams set for the match are Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Oleg Boltin; SANADA, Ren Narito & Yoshinobu Kanemaru; and Tiger Mask IV, Togi Makabe & Ryusuke Taguchi.

Kaisei Takechi — who competes for DDT Pro Wrestling and is a member of pop group The Rampage — will be part of the ranbo as well. His partners have not been announced yet.

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 (Sunday, January 4, 2026 on NJPW World) —

  • Hiroshi Tanahash’s retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji
  • NEVER Openweight Champion EVIL defends against Aaron Wolf
  • IWGP Junior Heavyweight title number one contender’s match: El Desperado vs. SHO vs. Kosei Fujita vs. Taiji Ishiimori
  • David Finlay, Shingo Takagi, Gabe Kidd, Drilla Moloney & Hiromu Takahashi vs. Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman, Henare, and two mystery partners
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano defend in a multi-team ranbo

NJPW confirms Wrestle Kingdom 20 main event

Hiroshi Tanahashi’s retirement match is officially set to close NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20.

NJPW has revealed the match order for the January 4 Tokyo Dome show, confirming that Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada will be the main event. It will be the final match Tanahashi — one of the greatest wrestlers of his time who helped lead NJPW into a new golden era — ever competes in.

Okada, now signed to AEW, is returning to NJPW for this match to help give Tanahashi a fitting sendoff. Throughout their careers, Tanahashi has been a rival, friend, and mentor to Okada.

The semi-main event of Wrestle Kingdom will be Konosuke Takeshita vs. Yota Tsuji in a matchup where the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship and Global Heavyweight Championship are both on the line.

In a recent interview with NJPW, Okada explained why he thought his match against Tanahashi should headline over the double title bout.

“I’ve always thought that the IWGP title should absolutely go on last, but in a situation like this Tanahashi’s last match should absolutely go on last. That’s what people are coming to see,” Okada said. “Maybe this is pushing it a bit but it’s kind of like eating your meal, having dessert and then in comes a second entree. People might be stuffed, but even then, maybe because of that I like the main event better.”

Even after ending his in-ring career, the 49-year-old Tanahashi will remain hugely important to NJPW as the promotion’s real-life president.

Tickets to the show have completely sold out, with this set to be the best-attended Wrestle Kingdom ever. The event will be broadcast live on NJPW World.

Here is the announced lineup:

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 (Sunday, January 4, 2026) —

  • Hiroshi Tanahash’s retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji
  • NEVER Openweight Champion EVIL defends against Aaron Wolf
  • IWGP Junior Heavyweight title number one contender’s match: El Desperado vs. SHO vs. Kosei Fujita vs. Taiji Ishiimori
  • David Finlay, Shingo Takagi, Gabe Kidd, Drilla Moloney & Hiromu Takahashi vs. Great-O-Khan, Callum Newman, Henare, and two mystery partners
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano defend in a multi-team ranbo

NJPW announces huge ticket milestone for Wrestle Kingdom 20

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 has reached a huge ticket milestone.

It was announced overnight that tickets to the January 4 Tokyo Dome show have officially sold out. NJPW sent out a message thanking the fans for making this happen but did not provide an exact number of tickets sold. There are expected to be more than 50,000 fans attending the show.

Wrestle Kingdom 20 will feature the retirement of all-time great Hiroshi Tanahashi, who is facing off against his longtime rival Kazuchika Okada. The other top match on the card is Konosuke Takeshita vs. Yota Tsuji in a winner-take-all match for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship and IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship.

In the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, Dave Meltzer noted that this will be the best-attended Wrestle Kingdom ever and the best NJPW crowd since the late 1990s.

“The 1/4 Tokyo Dome has now sold out every possible ticket they could sell. It already broke the attendance and gate record for a Wrestle Kingdom show,” Meltzer wrote. “From a legitimate attendance mark it would be the biggest since the Antonio Inoki retirement show in 1998. It was said to be one of the three most in-demand tickets (along with that show and the 1995 Keiji Muto vs. Nobuhiko Takada IWGP title match) in company history.”

The match order for Wrestle Kingdom 20 has not been revealed yet. The show is set to stream live on NJPW World and has the following matches booked so far:

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 (Sunday, January 4, 2026) —

  • Hiroshi Tanahash’s retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji
  • NEVER Openweight Champion EVIL defends against Aaron Wolf
  • Winner-take-all match: IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani
  • IWGP Junior Heavyweight title number one contender’s match: El Desperado vs. SHO vs. Kosei Fujita vs. Taiji Ishiimori
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano defend in a multi-team ranbo
  • Kaisei Takechi in action

New title match booked for NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20

The card for NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 officially has a new addition.

NJPW has confirmed that NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano will defend their titles in a multi-team ranbo at the January 4 Tokyo Dome show. The match was set up this week with an angle where YOH staged a protest at an NJPW show, demanding that his team get a spot on Wrestle Kingdom. YOH said they would take on any number of challengers.

The ranbo match has a tornado stipulation where there are no tags and eliminations can occur via pinfall, submission, or being thrown over the top rope. Once one member from a team is out, the whole team is eliminated.

“The NEVER Openweight 6 man Champions were created at Wrestle Kingdom 10, and their tenth anniversary is being marked in this first time ever team ranbo,” NJPW wrote. “In the match, an as yet unknown number of teams will make their entrances at one minute intervals. Tornado rules mean there are no tags, and when one member of a team is pinned, submitted or thrown over the top rope, that entire team is eliminated, with the last trio standing the NEVER 6 Man Champions. Who will be victorious in this new twist on a Ranbo Tokyo Dome tradition?”

In another Tokyo Dome announcement, NJPW has confirmed that Kaisei Takechi of DDT Pro Wrestling and pop group The Rampage will be competing at Wrestle Kingdom. It’s not been announced which match he’ll be wrestling in.

Here is where the Wrestle Kingdom card stands with more than a month to go:

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 (Sunday, January 4, 2026 on NJPW World) —

  • Winner-takes-all match: IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi’s retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • NEVER Openweight Champion EVIL defends against Aaron Wolf
  • Winner-takes-all match: IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani
  • IWGP Junior Heavyweight title number one contender’s match: El Desperado vs. SHO vs. Kosei Fujita vs. Taiji Ishiimori
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions YOH, Master Wato & Toru Yano defend in a multi-team ranbo
  • Kaisei Takechi in action

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20’s seating configuration sells out, more to be added

NJPW has sold out its current configuration of seats for Wrestle Kingdom 20.

The company announced on Sunday morning that although they are sold out seven weeks ahead of their annual January 4 show at the Tokyo Dome, more tickets will be available for purchase.

“THANK YOU!,” they wrote on social media. We have SOLD OUT our configuration for Wrestle Kingdom 20 in the Tokyo Dome, seven weeks in advance! Extra seating will be opened in the coming days, you can still have a chance of making it!”

Next year’s Tokyo Dome event has become a big seller thanks in part to Hiroshi Tanahashi’s upcoming retirement match, which will take place on January 4. His opponent will be none other than longtime rival Kazuchika Okada, who made his first appearance in NJPW in over a year last weekend to officially throw out the challenge.

Here is the current lineup for Wrestle Kingdom 20:

NJPW WrestleKingdom 20 (January 4)

  • IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji in a winner takes all match
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • EVIL vs. Aaron Wolf for NEVER Openweight title
  • NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani vs. IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri in a winner takes all match
  • Number one contendership match for IWGP Junior Heavyweight title: El Desperado vs. Kosei Fujita vs. Taiji Ishimori vs. SHO

Hiroshi Tanahashi’s opponent for retirement match at NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20 revealed

Hiroshi Tanahashi and Kazuchika Okada will wrestle one final time in the Tokyo Dome on January 4.

Tanahashi defeated Yuto-Ice in the main event of today’s Road in Anjo show, held in Okada’s hometown and on his 38th birthday. Following the match, Okada’s old coin-drop music played and he came out to confront Tanahashi along with his longtime manager Gedo.

“Congratulations on your retirement and thanks for your hard work,” Okada said before challenging him for Wrestle Kingdom 20, adding, “Don’t get too tired before then.”

“The rain will fall on Wrestle Kingdom 20,” Gedo said, although the match has yet to be officially confirmed.

It will be the fourth time the two have wrestled at Wrestle Kingdom. Tanahashi beat Okada at Wrestle Kingdom 7 and 9 before Okada finally beat him at Wrestle Kingdom 10.

The updated lineup for this year’s Wrestle Kingdom is available below:

NJPW WrestleKingdom 20 (January 4)

  • IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji in a winner takes all match
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi retirement match: Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • EVIL vs. Aaron Wolf for NEVER Openweight title
  • NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani vs. IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri in a winner takes all match

EVIL to defend NEVER title against Aaron Wolf at NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 20

A new title match is official for Wrestle Kingdom 20.

Last month, it was announced that Olympic gold medalist Aaron Wolf would make his pro wrestling debut against EVIL at the Tokyo Dome on January 4. During NJPW’s Wrestle Kingdom 20 press conference on Monday, EVIL upped the ante. After Wolf’s opening comments, in which he vowed to spend the next two months preparing for his debut match, it was EVIL’s turn to speak. But first he pulled out a can of spray paint and stained the NEVER Openweight belt gold, declaring that it was his gold medal and he was the only gold medalist in professional wrestling. 

As the two began to argue about gold medals and respect, EVIL claimed that Wolf was scared going into his first match, and that he was going to put even more pressure on the debutante by putting the NEVER title on the line. 

Wolf, who won a gold medal in judo at the 2020 Olympic games in Tokyo, signed with New Japan Pro Wrestling in June. He first made his presence known in NJPW at the King of Pro-Wrestling event in Ryōgoku on October 13. On that show, EVIL defeated Oleg Boltin to win the NEVER Openweight title. After the match, Boltin was attacked by EVIL’s House of Torture comrades, including Dick Togo and Yujiro Takahashi. Wolf hit the ring and laid them out to make the save. EVIL then challenged Wolf to face him at Wrestle Kingdom 20 on January 4 in the Tokyo Dome. 

NEVER is an acronym of the terms “New Blood”, “Evolution”, “Valiantly”, “Eternal”, and “Radical.” The championship was originally meant to feature younger talent and outside wrestlers not signed to the promotion. EVIL is a four-time NEVER champion, having defended the title three times and spending over 220 days as champ. Tomohiro Ishii has won the belt a record six times, while five-time champion Shingo Takagi holds the records for most defenses (nine) and most total days as champion (530). 

Here is the current card for WrestleKingdom 20:

NJPW WrestleKingdom 20 (January 4)

  • IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji in a winner takes all match
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi retirement match, opponent yet to be named. 
  • EVIL vs. Aaron Wolf for NEVER Openweight title
  • NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Saya Kamitani vs. IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri in a winner takes all match