Bloodsport XIII live results: Josh Barnett vs. Gabe Kidd, Natalya debuts

The 13th edition of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport returns as part of WrestleMania week in Las Vegas, live from the Palms with a slew of WWE talent on the show.

Barnett himself will compete in the main event, taking on former NJPW Strong champion and Barnett disciple Gabe Kidd.

WWE’s Natalya will make her Bloodsport debut as she goes one-on-one with Miyu Yamashita. She will be flanked by roster mate and Bloodsport regular Shayna Baszler who takes on Konami.

The men’s WWE main roster will also be well-represented as Karrion Kross fights JR Kratos while Pete Dunne goes heads-up against Timothy Thatcher.

NXT will also have a presence with Tavion Heights vs. Royce Issacs; Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki; and Karmen Petrovic fighting Maika.

The card is rounded out by former IWGP World Champion Zack Sabre Jr. vs. former ROH World Champion Jonathan Gresham, and former AEW/ROH wrstler Leyla Hirsch against Jordan Blade.

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Bloodsport rules: Fights are won by KO, submission, countout, DQ, or referee stoppage. If a fight falls out of the ring, fighters must allow their opponent the chance to get back into the ring. There is a 10 count on the outside. No biting, no eye gouging, no hair pulling, no small joint manipulation, no low blows, no foreign objects, no fighting after the bell. Any violation can result in a disqualification.

The Las Vegas crowd was hot for all competitors during the introductory ceremony before the fights. Karrion Kross got on the mic and hyped the show, thanked Josh Barnett for bringing it back to Vegas, and then said they had the best in the world on this show.

Leyla Hirsch (0–0) vs. Jordan Blade (0–0)

The Las Vegas crowd was hot for all competitors during the introductory ceremony before the fights. Karrion Kross got on the mic and hyped the show, thanked Josh Barnett for bringing it back to Vegas, and then said they had the best in the world on this show.

Leyla Hirsch (0–1) def. Jordan Blade (0–0) via TKO in 3:34

Jimmy Smith and “Filthy” Tom Lawlor on commentary for this event tonight. Jordan Blade was super-stoked to be there, slamming her hands on the mat upon entrance into the ropeless ring. The venue and camera setup looked really cool for this show and might be the best looking of all the Bloodsport events so far.

Hirsch with a quick double-leg seconds into the fight. Blade took her back and slammed crossfaces across Hirsch head, then picked her up with a waist lock and German suplexed her before mounting her and laying down fists. Blade attempted an arm bar but then went to an omoplata but Hirsch rolled out of it, stood up, went for a straight ankle lock but Blade tried reversing it, swept her, and tried a footlock of her own. Smith referenced Bas Rutten vs. Frank Shamrock when they were trading slaps in while they fought for leglocks. That’s what it looked like.

Hirsch went for a fireman’s carry, but Blade blocked it and sprawled. Hirsch rolled out of it and went for a cross-arm breaker. She looked like she had it locked in, but Blade was able to stack her, lift her up, and then powerbomb her to the mat, breaking the hold. Blade then pounced and went into mounted ground-and-pound before attempting a cross-arm breaker of her own. Hirsch broke out of it and kicked Blade in the leg, then gave her a German suplex of her own. Blade was stunned.

They traded open palm strikes on their feet for a bit until Hirsch caught Blade with a power slam and followed up with ground and pound and the ref called for the TKO.

Maika (0–0) defeated Karmen Petrovic (1–0) via submission in 4:27

Petrovic debuted at Bloodsport last year and impressed with her karate background on display. She beat Sumie Sakai previously. “The Crimson Cannon Empress” Maika is one of STARDOM’s top stars.

Petrovic was quick with her low leg kicks early on. Maika took her down to the mat but neither could gain the upper hand and both ended up on their feet shortly after. The crowd was split cheering for both. Maika slammed Petrovic a few times with mat returns. Maika slapped Petrovic on the ground and broke away.

On their feet, Petrovic took Maika down with a spinning sweep and followed with a rear headlock. Maika was able to balloon-sweep her way out of Petrovic’s grips and later caught Petrovic with an armlock. Crowd got hot towards the end of this.

Petrovic with a flurry of kicks towards the end, but when she went for a spinning kick, Maika caught it, locked her ankle, then transitioned to a sleeper before taking her over, slamming her backwards, then finished Petrovic off with the rear naked choke. The fights continue to heat up.

Charlie Dempsey NXT (3–1) defeated Shinya Aoki DDT (0–0) via TKO

Dempsey has become somewhat of a Bloodsport regular in the past few years. He picked up a win over Tracy Williams and a loss to Royce Isaacs since he’s been appearing. Aoki, on the other hand, hasn’t appeared on any of the Bloodsport shows, but he’s perfect for the setting. At a time in the 2000s–2010s he was arguably the best grappler from Japan. He has plenty of MMA experience, recently picking up a win for ONE FC, but regularly wrestles atypical matches for DDT.

They began with a Greco-Roman knucklelock test-of-strength that showed off both wrestler’s power and flexibility. Dempsey was eventually able to suplex Aoki over, but Aoki slipped away and went for a double wristlock. He’d move to a kneebar attempt but couldn’t sink it in, nor the heel hook. They’d fight in a figure-four that Aoki’d lock in but Dempsey broke out of it, again with power. He’s the bigger of the two here.

Aoki attempted a full nelson but Dempsey broke out of it. Aoki has Dempsey back on the mat with a headscissors. The crowd started chanting for Dempsey. They fought for armlocks again.

Dempsey fought for a suplex but Aoki answered with a cobra twist. Dempsey used a sneaky toehold to escape. He went for a bridging calfslicer but Aoki caught Dempsey in a choke. Dempsey went back to the toehold and bent himself backwards with it. Aoki scored a toehold of his own. Quite literally hold-for-hold in these moments, nonstop.

Dempsey went for a butterfly suplex but he couldn’t bring Aoki over. Aoki again went to a sleeper but Dempsey reversed it with a Regal Plex, TKO’ing Aoki. This was technical grappling heaven. Really good stuff.

Karrion Kross WWE (1–1) defeated JR Kratos (1–1) in 7:41 via submission

Both Kratos and Kross return to Bloodsport after a while away. Kross had one of the best Bloodsport matches ever against Davey Boy Smith Jr. on the first of Barnett’s Bloodsports. This is another Bloodsport “dream match,” one where you think to yourself “huh, why hasn’t this one happened yet?”

Kross fought in his jiu-jitsu gi; Kratos in just his gi pants. Kross had a big hometown advantage in Las Vegas and sounded to have a lot of fans in the house. He bowed to each side before the bout.

They were cautious at the beginning of this. Kratos was on top early in this and the crowd booed a bit even then. They cheered when Kross reversed and got on top. Kratos came back with control from the side as Kross was in turtle position; Kratos threw a few knees.

Kross tried a choke from behind but couldn’t cinch it in. This was a slower power match with two big, big dudes. Kross attempted an armbar but no dice. Kratos got on top, pulled Kross’ gi top over his head and threw a couple knees to the grounded Kross—which is legal in Bloodsport. Kross didn’t look too happy and whipped off his gi and the crowd hyped up for it. They chanted “you f’d up” at Kratos.

They traded strikes on their feet from here. They talked trash. Kratos dropped Kross with one shot but Kross was up quickly afterwards. At the five-minute call they were trading chest chops. Kratos said something about WWE and insisted Kross lay in harder chops, which Kross did. Kratos then leveled Kross with a lariat, then folded him with a German suplex. “F*ck you, Kratos!” was Kross’ response to that. Kratos answered with a power bomb. Kross flipped him off. Kratos grabbed his middle finger. Kross shoved him off and drilled Kratos with a backdrop suplex. This looked awesome. The crowd chanted “one more time!” and he obliged them.

Kratos somehow came back with a jumping knee, but Kross was able to grab an arm triangle from the back position and get Kross to tap with it. This was really fun, really violent and everything you’d want out of a “hoss fight” like this.

Next on the card was a tribute ceremony to Combat Icons Tank Abott and Don Frye, who appeared on stage between bouts.

Pete Dunne (0–0) defeated Timothy Thatcher (2–3) via submission in 11:15

Thatcher is another Bloodsport stalwart and holds a big and special win over Josh Barnett in the past. This will be Dunne’s Bloodsport debut and I think a number of fans are eagerly awaiting for Dunne to be “let off the leash,” so to speak.

The two locked up early and traded positions. They targeted each other’s shoulders. Thatcher went for an armlock but Dunne countered out and then went after Thatcher’s legs and ankles. Thatcher offered a standing straight anklelock as an answer before moving into a single-leg crab, and from there to a bow-and-arrow submission.

Thatcher and Dunne began trading fists on the ground after a while. Thatcher would return to the single-leg crab and really wrenched on it. Dunne threw some upkicks but Thatcher dropped to his back and went for an achilles lock. The two booted each other in the face on the ground. Thatcher rolled into a hammerlock using his legs, then went after Dunne’s joints, his fingers and knuckles, before transitioning to a head-and-arm shoulder lock. Dunne slipped out of that but Thatcher would then go for an STF but couldn’t finish it. Dunne with an armlock attempt but Thatcher was able to escape into Dunne’s closed guard. Dunne threw closed fists at Thatcher and then was able to catch Thatcher with a triangle choke. Thatcher moved out of that back into the single-leg crab. Dunne had a nice escape, then he tried snapping Thatcher’s fingers while he held him in a scarf hold.

Dunne went for an STF of his own and had a bit more luck than Thatcher did, kind of. Neither of these guys could cinch anything in for more than a few seconds. Dunne finally locked in a heel hook, a deep one, but Thatcher tried slapping his way out, then stomping his way out, which worked. The 10-minute call sounded. Thatcher slapped Dunne in the face on the ground and move into a cross ambreaker. Dunne escape and started stomping Thatcher’s head. Thatcher fired back with huge uppercuts. Dunne with a gamengiri kick to Thatcher’s head before snapping Thatcher’s fingers and tapping him out with an armbar. The crowd chanted “Brusierweight!” afterwards.

Nattie Neidhart WWE (0–0) defeated Miyu Yamashita TJPW (0–1) via submission

Neidhart has been vocal on social media about her passion for this match. It will be the first time in 18 years she’ll have stepped inside a non-WWE ring. Yamashita’s Bloodsport debut was a violent spectacle of a main event against WWE’s Shayna Baszler.

Crowd was excited for Nattie during this. They were tentative early, with Yamashita throwing kicks and Neidhart trying to grapple Yamashita to the mat. Yamashita threw knees but Neidhart caught her with a double-leg. She’d pass Yamashita’s guard, but Yamashita went for a guillotine choke.

Yamashita went for a straight ankle lock on the ground. She slapped Neidhart will they were on the ground, with Yamashita attacking the legs. The crowd sounded split between the two wrestlers at this point. Yamashita came down on Neidhart with a heavy spinning kick to Neidhart while she was on the ground.

Neidhart fought out of Yamashita’s back control and found Yamashita in an ankle lock, then later a rear chinlock. She almost caught Yamashita in a leglock.

The two traded hard strikes on their feet. They jaw-jacked and slapped the snot out of each other. Neidhart grounded Yamashita and locked in an Americana lock. Yamashita moved back to the guillotine lock before Neidhart slammed Yamashita to the mat to break the hold.

Neidhart went for the sharpshooter but no luck. Yamashita caught Neidhart with a massive wheelkick to the face that looked like it KO’d Neidhart but it didn’t. Neidhart shoved Yamashita into the ring post, then rolled her over and slapped on the sharpshooter. Yamashita was passed out, so the ref called the match. The crowd went wild for Neidhart. A “both these women” chant broke out.

Neidhart offered a handshake afterwards, but Yamashita shook her head “no” and then flipped her the double bird. This set Neidhart off, and the two started fighting again. Neidhart flipped her own double bird before high-fiving fans walking to the back. She’d run into Kenzie Page from NWA who then flipped her own double bird, which sparked another mini-brawl in the crowd. Security broke that one up.

Tavion Heights (0–0) defeated Royce Isaacs (1–2) via TKO in 8:38

Isaacs, longtime Bloodsport competitor, secured a victory over NXT’s Charlie Dempsey at Bloodsport XI on July 28, 2024. Tavion Heights was a Greco-Roman bronze medalist in the 2020 Olympics and competed in NOAH’s N1 Victory tournament in 2024.

Heights with a big suplex early on. Isaacs rolled into a leglock or kneebar after this. Heights used an anaconda roll on Isaacs but couldn’t keep him down. Isaacs with a double wristlock from guard position as Heights tried rolling out of it. He eventually did and locked in a scarf hold. Isaacs picked Heights up by the leg before headbutting him to the mat and going for an armbar. Filthy Tom made a good point mentioning that many competitors had gone for armbars all night but no one had been able to finish with one, at least not yet.

When the five-minute call sounded, the two traded fisticuffs before a big German suplex from Isaacs, who’d then move back into an armlock submission, then to a leglock. Heights escaped and leveled Isaacs with a lariat. He then took Isaacs over with a deadlift capture suplex that could have turned out to be a disaster but they pulled it off in the end. Heights moved into an arm triangle but Isaacs escaped. He’d answer with a big sit-out power bomb on Heights, then mounted him and dropped elbows before transitioning to an armbar, then to a toehold. Heights was figuratively on the ropes.

Isaacs locked in a guillotine choke but the two ended up spilling out of the ring onto the floor. Heights suplexed Isaacs back into the ring, the hit his super high-angle belly-to-belly before TKO’ing Isaacs with headbutts on the mat. Really good bout with a different flavor from the others tonight.

Shayna Baszler (2–0) defeated Konami (1–0) via TKO in 5:58

Konami has appeared on Bloodsport: Bushido in Japan last year. Baszler is back for her third Bloodsport after two matches against Miyu Yamashita and Masha Slamovich, respectively. 

Michin from WWE was in Baszler’s corner. She went for a takedown early on. Both were aggressive from the get-go. They traded footlocks on the mat until they rolled out onto the floor. Well, Konami more so. She took advantage of the ring post and cranked on a leglock.

Konami took Baszler out with two heavy kicks of her own, one of the running, sliding kind. Baslzer collected herself on the floor before getting back into the ring.

The two traded high and low kicks in the center of the ring before Baszler caught Konami with a huge cradle suplex. Konami was back a few moments later with a takedown that smoothly transitioned her into an armbar.

Konami had both hooks in as she locked Baszler in a rear naked choke, stuck to her back like a spider, before Baszler escaped by locking Konami’s foot and twisting it into an ankle lock, thus forcing Konami to break the choke. She then held Konami in a standing ankle lock, but Konami rolled out of it and then kicked Baszler in the back, which forced Baszler face-first into the ringpost. Konami followed with a German suplex. Baszler answered with a modified Fisherman’s buster and followed with a flurry of stomps to the back of Konami’s head. The ref called for the bell. Baszler wins via TKO.

Zack Sabre Jr. NJPW (0–0) defeated Jonathan Gresham (0–1) in 2:34 of Overtime via TKO

Gresham returns to Bloodsport after a long time away. Gresham’s memorable match was against hardcore wrestler Masashi Takeda. Sabre is making his debut. I think this is a total dream match for a lot of people, especially for those who love World of Sport-style wrestling.

The speed of which they were exchanging holds was smooth, quick, fluid. At one point Sabre kicked Gresham so hard across the ring that Gresham flew out onto the floor.

They traded holds at a mile a minute, stretching and bending and rolling and folding. They’d move from the head and neck to the legs and feet and back up again at a fast pace. Sabre again kicked Gresham away in the ass and sent him out onto the floor. Gresham would later get his revenge and boot Sabre to the floor while he was on the edge of the apron.

This match is great in that it completely fits at a Bloodsport event, but on the other hand it feels very different, fresh, and the pace and flow they were moving at, the story that was told, it really worked.

Sabre and Gresham stood toe-to-toe. Sabre emphasized their height differential. This caught boos from the crowd. He put his chin on top of Gresham’s head. He slapped at Gresham, which Gresham kept brushing away. Gresham caught Sabre with a big chop that awed the crowd. He’d then take Sabre over with two suplexes before methodically moving into a wild pretzel lock that involves so many different limbs that I just don’t know what to call it. He was twisting Sabre’s ass up. He’d eventually fall into a single-leg crab while he peppered Sabre with hammerfists to the head.

On their feet, Gresham chopped Sabre, but Sabre answered with a huge palm strike. Blasted him. Gresham eventually came back with one of his own. They traded hard uppercuts, chops. Sabre threw kicks. Gresham furiously grappled Sabre back to the mat. The pace in this was wild.

Gresham locked in a figure four with two minutes left in the match. Sabre tried reversing the hold but Gresham rolled him back. With one minute left, they both rolled out onto the floor while tangled up in the figure four hold. They scrambled back into the ring with thirty seconds to go. They traded hard strikes, hard ones; Gresham took Sabre down and tried hammerfisting his way to victory but the time limit expired. A draw.

We find out that we are going into a five-minute overtime period.

Gresham and Sabre pick up right where they left off, trading really hard strikes, chops, kicks, the works. Sabre eventually went down after a chop. The two looked exhausted. Sabre was back up and they again traded kicks for chops. Sabre caught Gresham with some hard slaps behind the ear.

The finish saw Sabre block Gresham with a hard fist to Gresham’s arm, then a hard Penalty Kick to the face for the TKO.

It’d be fair to put this on your top matches of the year lists. It was really good. Very high level pro wrestling.

Gabe Kidd NJPW (0–0) defeated Josh Barnett (10–2–1) via TKO

Kidd made his Bloodsport debut here. He lost the NJPW Strong title to Tomohiro Ishii recently at Windy City Riot.

Barnett threw a fast hands early on. Kidd went for a single-leg. Kidd yelled at people in the crowd. Fans chanted “STFU” at Kidd. He’d sweep Barnett, but Barnett would reverse it and throw palm strikes. Kidd is nearly Barnett’s size and his body matches well.

Kidd would abruptly step out of the ring to shout at a fan in the crowd, more towards the second level.

When he was back in the ring, he’d bully Barnett out of it, shoving him to the floor before flying onto him, then locking in a front facelock. Barnett would toss Kidd onto the apron and rain down elbows.

Barnett hunted for a double wrist lock. Lawlor and Smith argued on commentary about whether it’s called a double wrist lock or a Kimura. Barnett locked Kidd in a butterfly neck crank that Kidd fought out of.

Barnett would sweep Kidd into a straight ankle lock with a smooth technique, almost like a schoolboy rollup into the submission.

Barnett held a headlock on Kidd for a bit, up until Kidd stood up and drilled him down with a backdrop suplex. They’d trade hard shots on their feet and Barnett landed some hard knees. Kidd launched Barnett with an exploder suplex, and would finish Barnett off with knees of his own and a brutal piledriver for the TKO victory. Excellent main event finish.

After the match, Kidd grabbed the mic and yelled at the same kid he was yelling at during the match and said he’d kick his arse. He then mentioned how there were lots of different promotions on the show but the guy from New Japan won the main event. He then asked for anyone to name him someone other than Barnett who’s done more to defend pro wrestling more than him. He said Barnett’s a champion in his heart and that he owed his life to Barnett. He offered a life’s worth of respect to Barnett for everything he’d done for Kidd. It was a solid speech.

Barnett got on the mic and put Kidd over and how much stronger, wiser and better Kidd had become after he’d gone through his darker days. Barnett thanked the fans and wrestlers for everything.

Final Thoughts: Maybe I’m just high on it from the last two matches, but I truly think this was the strongest Bloodsport of them all. Production-wise, it was the best next to Bloodsport Bushido. The crowd was extremely it, every match. The bouts themselves had a good variety and the competitors all looked stoked to be a part of the show. Every match was excellent but Sabre vs. Gresham was something else, and the main event was a great heavyweight match with good drama. Again, everything on this is very much worth watching. Go out of your way to watch. And I hope they continue to film at similar venues with similar production value. Bloodsport continues to come into its own. Well done to all involved.

Shayna Baszler vs. Konami added to Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII

Shayna Baszler is returning to Bloodsport for a match during WrestleMania 41 week in Las Vegas.

Game Changer Wrestling and Josh Barnett revealed today that Baszler will be in action against Stardom wrestler Konami at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII on April 17. After Konami called Baszler a dream opponent, Baszler cut a promo promising that Bloodsport will be a nightmare for her.

“Konami, you and I both come from the MMA world. In fact, we both trained with Megumi Fujii, arguably the greatest female fighter of all time,” Baszler said. “The difference between you and I is, although Bloodsport is in your DNA, I was born from Bloodsport. You said in a recent interview that I was a dream match of yours. The reality is: this match will be a nightmare.”

Baszler was the first-ever WWE talent booked for a Bloodsport show in 2024, and WWE wrestlers have continued to compete at the Bloodsport events that have taken place since. Baszler has a 2-0 record in Bloodsport with victories over Masha Slamovich and Miyu Yamashita. In WWE, Baszler is on the Raw roster and was featured on this week’s episode of WWE Speed.

Konami is making her Bloodsport debut against Baszler. The show is being held at the Pearl Concert Theater at the Palms Casino Resort in Vegas. It will stream live on TrillerTV+ with a start time of 11 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Pacific.

There have been eight matches announced for the card so far:

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XIII (Thursday, April 17) —

  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Jonathan Gresham
  • Karrion Kross vs. JR Kratos
  • Shayna Baszler vs. Konami
  • Natalya vs. Miyu Yamashita
  • Pete Dunne vs. Timothy Thatcher
  • Leyla Hirsch vs. Jordan Blade
  • Charlie Dempsey vs. Shinya Aoki
  • Karmen Petrovic vs. Maika

A matchup between Tavion Heights and Royce Isaacs has also been set up but not officially announced yet.

Michin advances in WWE Speed contender’s tournament

Michin is now one victory away from a WWE Speed Women’s Championship shot.

On today’s WWE Speed episode, Michin and Shayna Baszler met in the first round of a number one contender’s tournament. Most of the match had Baszler in control as she targeted Michin’s leg, but Michin was able to turn the tide and get a win from out of nowhere. She sent Baszler face-first into the middle turnbuckle and then rolled her up for a three count with 48 seconds left on the three-minute clock.

Up next for Michin is a tournament match against NXT’s Sol Ruca on Speed next Wednesday (April 9). The winner earns a title shot against WWE Speed Women’s Champion Candice LeRae.

Ruca advanced with a victory over Katana Chance in the first round of the tournament.

LeRae became the inaugural Speed Women’s Champion in October 2024. So far, the story of her title reign has been remaining champion by going to time-limit draws in both of her defenses. Those defenses were against Natalya and Zoey Stark.

Wrestling Observer Radio: Queen of the Ring review, UFC 313 recap

Dave Meltzer and I are back with our post-UFC 313 episode of Wrestling Observer Radio. Paul Fontaine joined us to go over the show as well as the news coming out of it.

Here were some of the rest of the topics we covered:

  • Queen of the Ring
  • Janel Grant
  • Jade Cargill & Shayna Baszler
  • Carmella
  • New Japan Cup
  • SmackDown highlights
  • AEW Revolution Zero Hour

Click here to listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube (video sub needed)

Jade Cargill, Shayna Baszler had WWE backstage conflict before Cargill’s injury

Jade Cargill is said to have rubbed some people the wrong way backstage in WWE.

Our own Dave Meltzer reported in Friday’s edition of The Wrestling Observer Newsletter that Cargill and Shayna Baszler were involved in a backstage confrontation prior to Cargill’s injury last November. Baszler was reportedly ready to fight Cargill until management stepped in to defuse the situation.

Meltzer wrote:

“There was a confrontation that took place a few months ago before the Cargill injury involving Cargill and Baszler. It’s been confirmed by a half dozen people that it happened but nobody went into details past Cargill had rubbed enough people in the Raw women’s division the wrong way and Baszler was wanting to fight her until management found out and calmed the situation down.”

Meltzer continued:

“The time frame was when they were doing Baszler & Stark vs. Belair & Cargill matches. I don’t know what in particular happened other than it wasn’t just one thing and the belief is that some of this stemmed from inside the ring in those matches and some didn’t. Although one woman star said they believed the tension within the SmackDown side was worse than the Raw side.”

The last time Cargill and Baszler were in the ring together was the battle royal on the November 3 episode of Raw in Saudi Arabia. They also had several matches last summer as Cargill and Bianca Belair feuded with the Pure Vision Collective, including a triple threat match with The Unholy Union at Clash at the Castle.

Following her return at WWE Elimination Chamber, Cargill posted a video where she stated, “There are wolves in the shape of women all around me.” Chelsea Green seemingly responded on social media after, writing, “Imagine calling your coworkers ‘wolves’ while demanding respect, and I’m just over here like:”

Shayna Baszler signs new WWE contract

Update —

Bryan Alvarez notes that Shayna Baszler re-signed with WWE this June.

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Shayna Baszler is the latest wrestler to sign a new multi-year WWE contract.

Fightful reports that Baszler — whose contract was slated to expire this year — has re-signed with WWE. The deal came together recently, the report says.

Our Bryan Alvarez says the deal was actually completed in June.

Randy Orton, Asuka, Berto, and Angel are among the others who have inked new agreements with WWE in recent months.

“WWE went to a number of people whose deals are coming up over the next several months to sign new contracts,” Dave Meltzer wrote in the new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. “Asuka was announced publicly. There may be others but WWE did not confirm them.”

The 44-year-old Baszler is part of Pure Fusion Collective in WWE, a faction also featuring Zoey Stark and Sonya Deville. This Monday, Baszler defeated Vega in a singles match on Raw after distractions by Stark and Deville. Pure Fusion Collective then beat down Vega and Lyra Valkyria in a post-match angle.

Baszler — a former MMA fighter — has been a two-time NXT Women’s Champion and three-time WWE Women’s Tag Team Champion during her pro wrestling career. With WWE’s permission, Baszler has wrestled at two Josh Barnett Bloodsport events this year, winning matches against Masha Slamovich and Miyu Yamashita.

WWE Raw faction given new name

A new faction’s name has been revealed.

On Monday’s Raw, it was revealed that going forward the name of the faction consisting of Shayna Baszler, Sonya Deville, and Zoey Stark will be The Pure Fusion Collective.

In a promo on Raw, Deville revealed the name, mentioning the people they’ve taken out in recent weeks including Zelina Vega, Katana Chance, and Dakota Kai. Baszler said they would take out the women’s division limb by limb.

The trio went on to face Damage CTRL in a number one contender’s match for the WWE Women’s Tag Team titles. The match ended without a clear winner as champions Alba Fyre and Isla Dawn attacked both teams, ending the match. A three-way match for the titles was later announced for next week’s show.

Deville returned from injury back in May and quickly looked to recruit Baszler and Stark. While Baszler was apprehensive at first, the three eventually formed an alliance, targeting other teams on the Raw roster including Damage CTRL, taking out Kai on last week’s show.

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XI live results: Shayna Baszler, The Creeds, Charlie Dempsey in action

Several WWE and NXT stars will be in action as part of tonight’s Bloodsport XI show from Brooklyn, New York.

Shayna Baszler will make her second appearance in the Bloodsport ring as she battles Miyu Yamashita. Baszler won her first outing in April by defeating Masha Slamovich.

Both Julius and Brutus Creed will be in action for the first time in Bloodsport as Julius takes on Matt Makowski while Brutus battles former UFC fighters and former MLW Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor.

NXT’s Charlie Dempsey will return for his second Bloodsport outing as he takes on Royce Isaacs.

Other action includes Josh Barnett himself taking on Bad Dude Tito; Mike Santana vs. Homicide in a battle of mentor vs. mentee, the aforementioned Slamovich vs. Jody Threat in a clash of TNA talent; “Speedball” Mike Bailey vs. Akira; Timothy Thatcher vs. AEW/ROH’s Josh Woods; and Brian Johnson vs. Heddi Karaoui.

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The atmosphere between this show and the Bloodsport Bushido show in Japan is so vastly different. The Brooklyn crowd was small but enthusiastic and happy to be there; we heard chants for a lot of the wrestlers at the beginning of the show during fighter introductions. Masha Slamovich got a big reaction, as did Mike Santana (ex-LAX). Big “SAN-TAN-A” chant. Homicide came out wearing an awesome Yoshihiro Takayama t-shirt. 

Shayna Baszler grabbed the mic at the end of the introductions and said the following:

“Hold onto your pants and get ready to dance. This is pro wrestling like you’ve never seen before. Pro wrestling the way it was meant to be. This is Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport!”

The fans then started chanting for GCW. Shouldn’t they be chanting for Josh Barnett? 

The ring announcer went over the Bloodsport rules: Fights are won by submission, KO, count-out, disqualification, or ref stoppage. If the wrestlers go out of the ring, the wrestlers must re-enter the ring and the ref will give them to the count of ten to come back in. No biting; no eye-gouging; no hair-pulling; no small joint manipulation (fingers, toes, etc.); no foreign objects; no fighting after the bell. Time limits are 15 minutes with a five minute overtime if necessary. Main event is 20-minute time limit with a five minute overtime if necessary, and the bout will result in a draw if no winner is decided in overtime.

Heddi Karaoui defeated Brian Johsnon via submission

Brian Johnson is from Philadelphia so the Brooklyn crowd booed him. A “F*** the Eagles” chant broke out. The announcer called Johnson a “Catch Can” wrestler. Does he catch actual cans? The crowd was behind Karaoui and chanted his name.

Johnson went for an inverted ankle lock but Karanoui countered it with some llave type submissions. He conked Johnson with a knee that out Johnson on the floor; Johnson came back in and spit in his face. The crowd continued their verbal assault on Philly sports and Karaoui would soon tap Johnson out with inverted crucifix + crossface lock.

The crowd made this match because of how into it they were. Again, the vibes from the previous event to this one, it’s night and day.

Julius Creed defeated Matt Makowski via TKO

“Weapon X” Matt Makowski has fought in Bloodsport before. He’s also fought for PFL. Creed is from WWE NXT and is known for his wrestling background. 

Creed took Makowski down with a single leg off the bat. Later he landed a nice waistlock takedown, but Makowski countered with a triangle attempt until both were back on their feet. Makowski was more comfortable striking compared with Creed, who ate a couple short shots. He’d immediately take Makowski down after a few of those shots. 

Creed landed a back suplex from a pro wrestling power bomb position, which the crowd enjoyed. Makowski later victory rolled into an armlock which was cool. Creed was out of the hold quickly. 

Creed started hammering down shots on Makowski before launching him twice with front suplexes. Makowski returned fire with palm strikes and middle kicks and a running knee. He had Creed in an armbar that Creed cradled out of. 

We then saw our first Rampage Jackson triangle-armbar power bomb spot of the night in this match. Makowski no-sold it and went for a superman punch, but Creed caught him mid-air, dumped him back-first to the mat, then drilled Makowski with a seated lariat before assailing him with strikes until the ref called for the bell. Nice outing for both guys. Creed has the “it factor.” This was good.

Masha Slamovich defeated Jody Threat via TKO

Slamovich came to the ring with the TNA Women’s Tag title and the Jersey Championship Wrestling title. She had a nice fan following here in Brooklyn with the GCW-ites.

Slamovich went for a headlock takeover early on but Threat blocked it and sprawled so deeply; she basically did a split with her sprawl. It looked great.

Veda Scott joined the commentary booth for this and immediately the match felt more important, more professional.

Threat took Slamovich down hard and went for an armbar. Dueling chants broke out with 60% for Masha and 30% for Jody I’d say. They went back and forth for dominant position until Slamovich threw her with a single-arm suplex and followed with an amrbar attempt of her own. We got out second Rampage Jackson triangle armbar power bomb spot after this.

Slamovich went for a hook kick but faked threat out and locked Threat in an armbar instead. Tricky. Threat would counter into a rear naked choke, then took Slamovich to her feet and launched her with a back suplex and followed up with a hard boot to the face. “Was this it?” That was the feeling on the crowd’s mind in this moment. Total peak point. Threat went for another back suplex but Slamovich elbowed out of it, then slapped on a choke sleeper of her on. It was in nice & deeply, too, but Threat powered out of it and got to her feet, though Slamovich seemed to have expected this, because she’d grab Threat’s arm and drill her with a wrist-clutch suplex, an immediate running knee and a few hard elbows before the referee stopped the match. Great match with a cool finish.

Royce Isaacs defeated Charlie Dempsey via submission

This is WWE NXT Charlie Dempsey’s second Bloodsport. Isaacs is a Bloodsport OG. The crowd was way more behind Dempsey than Isaacs throughout this. “Fickle!”

Dempsey made ample use of the crossface to control Isaacs on the ground. Isaacs was the powerhouse of the two and was able to power his way out of many of Dempsey’s techniques. The grappling pace between these two was good, fast, organic.

Dempsey used a an inverted Muta Lock with a cravat; Isaacs countered with a modified ankle lock until Dempsey kicked his way out of the hold. The crowd appreciated the effort and started chanting “BLOOD-SPORT!”

Back on the mat, Dempsey had Isaacs locked in a front facelock until Isaacs countered with a top key lock. Dempsey coutered that and tried a stacking pass to get up to Isaacs face. He went for an armbar but missed it, then tried to bridge out of Isaacs’ side control, but no dice for Dempsey; Isaacs is too strong. Dempsey eventually slid out and locked on a headscissors and went for an armbar until Isaacs locked Dempsey into an upside face lock, almost north-south position.

They’d then pummel for leg and ankle control on the mat. Neither could one up the other. The two started slapping the piss out of each other while the crowd lapped it up. Back on their feet, Dempsey would lay in a big European uppercut and a sequence of barroom strikes—right hands, stomps—but Isaacs refused to lie down, grabbed Dempsey by the neck and threw a number of knees before laying him out with a Falcon Arrow before locking in a front facelock guillotine choke. Dempsey looked close to tapping, but he himself would power out and hoisted Isaacs over his head with a Northern Lights type suplex before cinching in a step-over double-wrist lock. Isaacs got to his feet, but Dempsey used a butterfly suplex and rolled into the same hold, not giving up positional control. He quickly slid into a Fujiwara armbar, grabbing Isaacs’ arm from a different angle. He’d do the same again, moving from Fujiwara armbar to leglock before moving back into an STF hold. Isaacs again muscled out and suplexed Dempsey before locking in a rear naked choke with one hook in. Dempsey looked like he was going out, but he’d then grab Isaacs’ three fingers (which does not fall under illegal joint-manipulation; grabbing one or two fingers would result in DQ) and got back to his feet. Was he going to break out? Nope: Isaacs would then land his signature deadlift full-nelson-to-German suplex and followed with an STF of his own. Dempsey blocked the facelock grip, so Isaacs flipped his hips to the opposite side while keeping the step-over toehold cinched in and grabbed Dempsey in almost what you’d call a Bulldog Choke, just not from the usual angle; Isaacs peeled back at Dempsey’s neck and shoulders and it looked brutal. Dempsey tapped; Isaacs wins!

What a match. This was excellent. The crowd unfortunately booed the finish, so I assume they are more WWE fans than Bloodsport fans. If you follow all of the Bloodsport cards, you know Isaacs has been on a majority of them and always delivers the goods. Again, this was GREAT pro wrestling. I think most fans would agree with me when I say we probably need a rematch. Very nice.

Brutus Creed defeated “Filthy” Tom Lawlor via TKO

F4W’s very own sports broadcast journalist Tom Lawlor came out looking like he’d just gotten off the Lex Express, decked out in USA flag fight shorts, a USA eagle shirt buttoned once at the bottom and tied for good measure, a red, white and blue top-hat, all to the tune of “Coming to America” by James Brown. We love ya, “Filthy.”

Brutus Creed is also from WWE NXT and is brother of Julius who we saw earlier. Brutus is the beefier of the two. The brothers previously held the NXT Tag Team Championship in the past. Could Brutus outdo his brother in his Bloodsport debut?

Brutus went for a double-leg takedown early, but Lawlor blocked it. He’d slap on a front facelock and jump Brutus into his guard, but Brutus deadlifted Lawlor off his neck with a suplex. He’d then start throwing either hammer-fists or what could also have been called a Wahoo McDaniel-esque chop to the head. After a few more, they were clearly hammer-fists. He’s a big, scary boy.

Lawlor went for the guillotine again, and again Brutus slammed him to the mat. Lawlor must have anticipated this, though, because he immediately locked Brutus in a triangle choke and threw some elbows at Brutus’ skull as he was caught prone in the position. Brutus wrestled out of it, but Lawlor’s jiu-jitsu arsenal is endless and he kept catching the younger fellow in holds. Brutus’ strategy against this was, well, brute force, slamming Lawlor agan with a Samoan drop. But again, Lawlor was able to catch Brutus in either an armlock or a crucifix, something to throw Brutus’ gameplan off. Brutus answered the attacks with a torture rack slam. The crowd then started chanting for Brutus. WWE crowd in the house, apparently.

Lawlor slapped Brutus in the ears; he wanted to keep the fight on their feet instead of on the mat, where Brutus was just too powerful.

Brutus then tried–well, actually, I have zero clue what he was attempting. He tried running up the ring post as though there were turnbuckle pads on it in an attempt at doing something “cool,” but Lawlor immediately caught him in a rear naked choke.

Again, Brutus overpowered Lawlor and again slammed him hard to the mat. He’d then go for that running basement lariat that his brother Julius used to beat Matt Makowski earlier on tonight, but Lawlor dodged it, then Brutus in a crucifix from the top and started laying elbows in. He’d roll Brutus over and keep the crucifix locked on as Lawlor continued throwing elbows in this Gary Goodrige UFC 8 style spot. Brutus actually rolled out of this, backwards, cradled Lawlor, then deadlifted him into and teased a cradle suplex, but Lawlor broke free and started peppering Brutus with palm strikes. He’d then chop Brutus down with kicks and knees. Brutus was fading; he tried a waist lock on Lawlor, but Lawlor countered out and threw an Inoki enzuigiri kick to the back of Brutus’ head.

Lawlor was able to throw Brutus with a back suplex and followed that with a low running dropkick to the face of Brutus before unleashing a flurry of strikes before cinching in the double-wrist lock again. Brutus then gator rolled out of it, held onto Lawlor’s waist and crushed him with a standing Doctor Bomb before nailing him with that seated running lariat we talked about before, the same as brother Julius used. This earned him a massive upset victory over Lawlor, another Bloodsport OG. The Creed Brothers are now both undefeated in Bloodsport.

This was really good. These brothers are perfect fits for Bloodsport and I hope to see them show up on more shows down the road.

Homicide defeated Mike Santana via submission

Two hometown heroes fought in this one. Santana entered through the audience and got a huge response. Both got loud chants. This had a bit of a main event feel.

Compared with the pace of the last few matches, this was heavy, methodical, mean. The fans were chanting “both-these-guys!” before anything even really happened.

Santana went for an armbar early on, but Homicide rolled towards the edge of the ring and grabbed the ring apron to try and smother Santana with in order to break the hold. Homicide took a moment outside of the ring to collect himself before re-entering.

Homicide played bully throughout this. Santana wrestled with superior mat technique but Homicide wrestled as the seasoned veteran, the one with even more unexpected tricks up the sleeve. He caught Santana with some hard European uppercuts before Santana blasted Homicide with a slap. Woah.

Santana caught Homicide with a short single-leg dropkick to the face before the two got into a slap-off. Santana would roll Homicide into a back armbreaker before Homicide countered, earning top position but not able to lock in a hold. Santana collected himself on the floor as the ref counted.

Back in the ring, Homicide jumped Santana into guard, but Santana immediately threw a few shots. No one really had the upper hand; it was almost always tit-for-tat.

As they fought near the ring post, it looked as though Homicide snuck in a low blow, but the ref may not have seen it. Santana seemed to be fine, though, because he then back-rolled up to his feet and caught Homicide with a jumping cutter–he “didn’t get all of it,” as the saying goes, but it looked fine in the end. Santana followed up with a huge power bomb before putting Homicide in a choke sleeper, two hooks in. The fans did a “this-is-awesome” chant.

Homicide countered with a guilltione of his own. Santana rocked him with a headbutt. Homicide answered with an exploder suplex, then pulled Santana in for a cutter of his own.

Homicide did a flatliner and then put Santana in an STF for the finish. He then put the ref in his guard. A few more refs came out and broke things up. The fans kept chanting “let-them-fight!” Homicide is your winner. The crowd booed. Homicide was waving it off. I don’t know what happened but it came off awkward.

Josh Barnett defeated Bad Dude Tito via KO

Bad Dude Tito is another longtime Bloodsportsman and this may have been his highest profile bout to date. Barnett came to the ring wearing two spiked gauntlets, ready for both a Bathory gig and/or a fight.

They pummeled hard at the bell and Tito was the one able to win the positional battle, tossing Barnett to the mat and attempting head control as Barnett quickly collected himself and fended the muscled Tito off.

Barnett was able to break free and take Tito to the mat himself, but Tito used a front facelock to flip Barnett onto his back with Tito taking full mount position. He’d transition to armbar but couldn’t lock it in, which allowed Barnett to roll out and take side control with a kesa gatame hold before Tito slipped out, going for a kneebar of his own.

They fought towards the edge of the ring, and Barnett would eventually launch Tito off his chest to the floor. Tito stormed back in the ring with a flying punch, then took him down back into side control and tried attempting a key lock from the top before moving back to mount and raining down hammers.

The two wrestled in this mangled 50/50 guard, struggling for leg control and dominant top position. Barnett hammered down on Tito with strikes. Tito would responded with a deadlift wrist-clutch suplex to the very large Barnett.

Tito then moved to a head-and-arm choke before Barnett reversed the hold into full mount and went to ground-and-pound. He threw hard elbows into Tito’s ribs.

Barnett launched Tito with the classic Billy Robinson double-underhook suplex, but both he and Tito were back on their feet immediately and were throwing hard hands before shredding Tito with a Akira Maeda-style rolling roundhouse kick for the KO. Really good stuff, as per usual. Respect Bad Dude Tito.

Afterwards, from out of nowhere, Former WWE & NJPW superstar MVP appeared in the ring. He said he and Barnett had been friends for a long time, and that MVP started fight training with Barnett back in California 11 years ago. He said he’s now a black belt in BJJ, and his contract with his current company is up soon. MVP said his retirement is coming up and he’d like to fight Josh Barnett before it happens. Barnett said he’d accept a fight with MVP regardless of what company he belonged to, be he a lone ronin warrior or not. Barnett said it was he who made the call to bring MVP in, and so of course he will accept the challenge. “Any time, any place, anywhere,” Barnett said. “This is where The Hurt Business cashes the most checks,” Barnett said of Bloodsport. The crowd chanted for MVP. “You don’t this guy,” Barnett said of MVP. “Just wait until you see the real MVP.”

Timothy Thatcher vs. Josh Woods: double count-out

Thatcher is the first fighter to defeat Josh Barnett at Bloodsport. There were two big chants for him before the match. Both he and Woods are tailor-made for Bloodsport. Woods was one of the very few highlights of late Sinclair-era ROH.

Woods seemed to out-wrestle Thatcher early on and slightly dominated position control. Thatcher was able to lock in a standing armlock as he stretched Woods’ jaw the opposite way. Woods was able to shimmy out of Thatcher’s hold, then pass his seated guard by quickly stacking Thatcher before hopping into top control. Very smooth move.

Thatcher countered out with wristlock control and was able to sit up into an armbar attempt. He used his knee to control Woods’ spine and overall body position. Woods did a good job at defending attacks and was able to escape to standing position.

Back on the mat, Thatcher zoned in on Woods’ ankle/shin/leg area, squeezing it, smashing it, yanking on it. Woods tried rubbing his forearm bone across Thatcher’s nose.

Back on their feet, the two traded hard strikes. Thatcher’s European uppercuts are starch-stiff. Woods later used a snap back suplex and held onto the the waistlock. Thatcher used a beautiful double-wristlock takedown to maneuver out of it. Woods ended up feet-first on the floor, and the two got into wild fisticuffs on the apron. Sloppy and violent and in the best kind of way.

The fell to the floor once again just moments later. Fans chanted “BLOOD-SPORT!” Back in the ring, they traded more hard strikes. Woods caught Thatcher with a big hammer chop; Thatcher responded with an Inoki enzuigiri to the head.

Woods locked in a rear naked choke close to the edge of the ring, but again they both fell to the floor. Woods reentered, but Thatcher tried dragging Woods back into the ring. Thatcher shouted “Get back into the ring!” and the two were back in the ring trading live rounds again. The two then rolled out onto the floor for a fourth time, where they fought to a double count-out which elicited massive boos from the audience. The two had a scuffle before Woods stormed backstage. I thought this was great, but the the crowd insisted on chanting “BULL-SH*T!” for the finish.

Shayna Baszler defeated Miyu Yamashita via TKO

Yamashita came out with her hair dyed red. I’m not sure how recently. This was Baszler’s second Bloodsport appearance. She came to the ring in her BJJ gi and black belt. Fans chanted “this-is-awesome!” before the ring announcements. I suppose the idea of this match is awesome, but yeah. Yamashita had a few “MI-YU” chants sounding before things kicked off.

Baszler bullied Yamashita early on. She fought from top position or standing position and caught Yamashita with a few low kicks. Yamashita was able to get back to her feet and throw a sharp spinning roundhouse kick that missed but startled Baszler. Yamashita did the “bring it on” gesture.” Respect Miyu Yamashita.

Baszler again muscled into top and side position and used her “bully-jitsu” as I call it, a mixture of high-level BJJ techniques mixed in with elbow scrapes across Yamashita’s face, wrist locks and knees to the face as Baszler posed for the crowd.

Yamashita fought off Baszler’s straight ankle lock attempt and went for one of her own. Yamashita has such independence with her legs that she was able to kick her way out of Baszler’s clutch and eventually moved herself to a rear chin-lock from behind.

Baszler often reverted to her Snakepit training and would often manipulate Yamashita’s joints to break holds, in a legal way in the Bloodsport context. Yamashita looked better and better on the ground, but Baszler would often have a hard answer for Yamashita’s ground attacks.

Yamashita threw Baszler with a release back suplex; Baszler answered with a Regal Plex and followed with a knee to the head. Yamashita pleaded with the referee not to stop the match.

“Come on!” Yamashita shouted in Baszler’s face, her Japanese konjō (guts, courage) shining bright.

The two traded hard kicks, each one a bit hotter than the next. Baszler was able to catch Yamashita in an ankle lock from one of the kicks, though. A fan tried making a joke about Kurt Angle which was really loud and fell completely flat on the broadcast. Just . . . why?

Yamashita then parkour’d herself off the ringpost with one leg and threw a kick with the other, catching Baszler right in the face. Huge response from the crowd for that. Yamashita threw another kick, but this time Baszler caught it and spun her around, then caught her in a Satoru Sayama-like tombstone for the TKO victory. Another excellent Bloodsport fight. The two shook hands and the crowd chanted for GCW afterwards.

Baszler got on the mic and said the fans either know her or “they don’t know sh**.” She then said she owed everything in her wrestling career to Josh Barnett because of how he helped her train pro wrestling after MMA. He told her that no one would understand why she was doing this, but that 20 wrestlers on the Bloodsport show know exactly why she’s doing this. She ended saying that if you hear Josh Barnett’s coming to town, be ready because they’re ready to tear it down.

Final Thoughts: This was an excellent pro wrestling show.

Dempsey vs. Isaacs was the highlight for me, but any of the matches could have taken best of the night depending on one’s taste. The overall wrestling quality was high, and fans didn’t try taking over the show until much later into the card, when they were tired.

If you’re already a Bloodsport fan, this is a must-watch. If you’re checking out this one because you’re a WWE fan intrigued by Dempsey, Baszler and the Creed Brothers’ appearances, this is a great starting point, especially since it is starting to feel like Shayna Baszler will be an important cog in this fight machine going forward.

Shayna Baszler vs. Miyu Yamashita official for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XI

Shayna Baszler’s opponent for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XI is now official as she will square off against Miyu Yamashita later this month.

After debuting with a victory over Masha Slamovich at Bloodsport X during WrestleMania weekend in Philadelphia, the WWE star was announced for her second go-round last month.

The 29-year-old Yamashita will be making her Bloodsport debut and will be up against Baszler for the first time ever. She made her GCW debut this past April in a trios bout and then was defeated by Joey Janela in May.

Baszler won’t be alone in representing WWE as Julius & Brutus Creed were announced as making their debut for the event last week.

Bloodsport XI will emanate from Brooklyn, New York, on Sunday, July 28th. It will be their third-such event of the year after the aforementioned Philadelphia show and their first-ever event in Tokyo, Japan, last month.

Here’s the current lineup:

  • Mike Santana vs. Homicide
  • Shayna Baszler vs. Miyu Yamashita
  • Julius Creed vs. TBA
  • Brutus Creed vs. TBA

Shayna Baszler returning for Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport XI

After making her debut at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport X during WrestleMania weekend in Philadelphia, WWE’s Shayna Baszler will return for her second round at the 11th edition.

Bloodsport XI will emanate from Brooklyn, New York, on Sunday, July 28th.

Baszler, accompanied by Zoey Stark, took on current TNA roster member and former GCW Champion Masha Slamovich, picking up the victory after stomping Slamovich repeatedly and so forcefully that the referee awarded her the win by TKO. Her opponent for this time has not yet been named.

Charlie Dempsey of WWE NXT was also on the show, picking up a win over Matt Makowski.

The 43-year-old Baszler remains in WWE and unsuccessfully competed in a three-way Money in the Bank qualifying match on Monday’s Raw.

Baszler is the third name announced for the show as Mike Santana vs. Homicide was the first officially announced bout.

The Bloodsport brand just made its debut in Tokyo, Japan, last weekend for Bloodsport Bushido. The July show will be their third of the year already.

WWE crowns new number one contenders for Women’s Tag Team titles

WWE has crowned new top contenders to Bianca Belair & Jade Cargill’s Women’s Tag Team Championship.

Shayna Baszler & Zoey Stark won a four-way bout on Monday’s WWE Raw to become the new number one contenders to the Women’s Tag Team titles held by Belair & Cargill.

No date has been announced for the Belair & Cargill vs. Baszler & Stark title match, but the bout could be announced for Saturday’s King and Queen of the Ring PLE pre-show should Belair be eliminated from the Queen of the Ring tournament on this Friday’s SmackDown episode.

It was also mentioned in a digital exclusive that Indi Hartwell & Candice LeRae would be getting a title shot as well, and Baszler & Stark may face them if they are successful.

The four-way match on Raw also featured the teams of Kairi Sane & Dakota Kai of Damage CTRL, Ivy Nile & Maxxine Dupri, plus Katana Chance & Kayden Carter. Baszler pinned Dupri to win the contest.

Belair & Cargill have held the Women’s Tag titles since defeating Sane & Asuka for the belts at Backlash on May 4 in France.

Our full report from Monday’s WWE Raw is available here.

Kofi Kingston & Shayna Baszler advance in WWE King & Queen of the Ring tournaments

The quarterfinals of the King & Queen of the Ring tournaments are now set.

Kofi Kingston defeated Rey Mysterio at a WWE house show in Macon, Georgia on Sunday to advance to the quarterfinals of the King of the Ring. He will now face Gunther on Raw.

Shayna Baszler also advanced in the Queen of the Ring tournament Sunday, defeating Maxxine Durpi. As a result, she will now face IYO SKY on Monday. Dupri substituted for Zelina Vega, who was pulled from the tournament earlier in the day due to injury.

The quarterfinals of the King of the Ring also include Ilja Dragunov vs. Jey Uso, Randy Orton vs. Carmelo Hayes, and LA Knight facing Tama Tonga. Queen of the Ring quarterfinals has Lyra Valkyria taking on Zoey Stark, Nia Jax facing Jade Cargill, and Tiffany Stratton going against Bianca Belair. Stratton and Knight advanced in house show matches that took place Saturday in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Both the King and Queen of the Ring finals will take place in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on May 25.

WWE Main Event results: Ivar vs. Julius Creed

This week’s WWE Main Event was taped at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania before Monday’s episode of Raw.

This was a good show with two decent wrestling matches this week.

Zoey Stark & Shayna Baszler defeated Kayden Carter & Katana Chance (4:45)

This was some solid tag team action to kick off the show, but the crowd was not really into it at all.

We were treated to a proper tag bout from start to finish, which is exactly what they should be putting on for a pre-Raw crowd like this; give them plenty of quick tags and lots of action and it nicely whets the appetite.

However, while that was true here, the crowd didn’t seem to have an appetite for it. Both teams worked hard with the combination of Stark and Baszler gelling smoothly at this point.

They built the match around getting Carter the hot tag and when she finally got it, the crowd barely noticed as she and Chance double-teamed Stark, but Baszler broke up the cover.

Baszler sent Carter outside, but Chance then sent Baszler packing. Chance then got caught by Stark who finished her with the Z-360.

It was a well-worked match that deserved a little bit more credit than it got in the arena.

Ivar defeated Julius Creed (w/ Brutus Creed) (7:31)

They gave Ivar the win here after Julius looked to be going on a mini-winning streak. It was good after the ads, but anything involving either of the Creeds normally is.

While Ivar has been working solo, it has been good to see him get over on his own, but the Creed brothers are incredible together, so it seems a waste not to find a tag match for them on this show.

Creed got the early advantage and tried to knock Ivar down and lift him off his feet. He finally managed to do both when he sent him over the top rope and hit him with a tope to take us to the break.

After the commercials, Ivar was making his way to the top rope when Creed sprang to his feet and met him up there and they did a superplex, which got the crowd going. Ivar recovered to hit a sitout powerbomb for two.

Creed hoisted Ivar up and used a fireman’s carry to plant him and then the straps came down and he went up top for a 450, but landed on his feet. Ivar countered with a super kick and slammed him in position for his moonsault to get the win.

A very good match by Main Event standards that they could pretty much do every week and it would go over well.

Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport X live results: Shayna Baszler vs. Masha Slamovich

For the first time ever, a WWE wrestler will appear at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport as Barnett disciple Shayna Baszler will make her show debut in Philadelphia Thursday.

Baszler will have tough competition as she battles former GCW Champion and former TNA titleholder Masha Slamovich.

That won’t be the only debut at Bloodsport X as multi-promotion champion Nic Nemeth makes his first walk into the unique Bloodsport ring against “Speedball” Mike Bailey.

Barnett himself will be in action and looking to rebound from his first loss as he challenges Johnny (Morrison) Bloodsport.

The Triller+ streaming special will also see a four-woman, one-night tournament as Marina Shafir, Lindsay Snow, Lady Frost and Janai Kai will battle.

Timothy Thatcher and Minoru Suzuki will also compete in separate bouts.

Per event rules, matches can only end via knockout or submission in a ring that has no ropes with a mat that pays homage to the classic movie of the same name.

**********

The Philadelphia venue is packed and lively. The ring announcer ran down the Bloodsport rules before introducing all of today’s fighters as each came to the ring. Charlie Dempsey from NXT came out with the announced entrants. He wasn’t previously announced. Big “BLOODSPORT” chant after everyone came out.

The venue is packed and lively. The ring announcer ran down the Bloodsport rules before introducing all of today’s fighters as each came to the ring. Charlie Dempsey from NXT came out with the announced entrants. He wasn’t previously announced. Big “BLOODSPORT” chant after everyone came out.

Viktor Benjamin defeated Akira Way via TKO (ref stoppage, kick)

Big chants for Akira at the start. The two got into it quickly and exchanged shots, palm strikes and knees. Akira Way was able to throw Benjamin but Benjamin was back up immediately. Akira landed a spinebuster but Benjamin transitioned into an achilles hold quickly. He put Akira down with a nice single-arm suplex. Akira countered on the ground and threw some elbows; Benjamin quickly countered to knee-on-belly position facing away from Akira and started peppering him with jabs to the solar plexus. Benjamin landed elbows, straight punches, roundhouse kicks. Akira fought back with headbutts. Benjamin kept throwing heavy kicks until Akira caught one and dragon screw legwhipp’d him to the mat before throwing Benjamin once more with a German suplex.

The crowd was pretty pro-Akira. He had Benjamin locked in a choke sleeper for a bit until Benjamin powered out and delivered a picture-perfect round kick to Akira’s head. Akira didn’t go down and flipped off “The Savage Gentleman.” He then went for a Pelé kick but “didn’t get all of it,” as is the parlance. Akira did a pretty cool looking double-wristlock suplex and held onto the submission after the two hit the mat. The crowd started chanting “Tap! Tap! Tap!” until Benjamin rolled to the floor, breaking the hold. Smart. He then hoisted Akira up into a vertical suplex hold and then dropped him on the concrete floor. Fans booed. Benjamin then nailed Akira with a 540 type kick to the face, spot on, TKO’ing Akira Way and picking up the win. Benjamin’s kicks are super accurate and fun to watch.

The crowd lovingly began chanting “F— that guy!” after the bout. Akira Way flipped Benjamin off before exiting. This was a great opener.

Nic Nemeth defeated “Speedball” Mike Bailey via TKO (rear naked choke)

Both Bailey and Nemeth sounded to have a lot of good will from the crowd before things started. Bailey got into Nemeth’s face during introductions. Wrestling vs. Tae Kwon Do is the loose story here; Nemeth has a collegiate wrestling background, Bailey a TKD expert.

Bailey looked to set up a triangle choke but Nemeth fought it off with jabs to the ribcage. Nemeth was able to maneuver around from the top position as Bailey attacked from his back. Bailey threw kicks and Nemeth went in for shots. Nemeth grabbed a double leg and dumped Bailey out onto the floor.

Back in the ring, Bailey threw a kick, but Nemeth caught it and took him down with another double leg. Bailey went to the floor again. Was he playing possum? Then, back in the ring, Nemeth went in for another double leg takedown, but he ran into a foot to the face from Bailey out of nowhere. The crowd stood up. Bailey quickly transitioned into an armbar but couldn’t lock it in all the way. Bailey let go of the hold, then went for a standing moonsault double knee-drop, but missed. Nemeth immediately went in for a rear naked choke and locked it in. Bailey tried walking to the ring post and grabbing onto it, but since there isn’t a proper rope break in Bloodsport, Nemeth didn’t have to break the hold. Instead, though, Nemeth let go for a split second, then spiked him backwards with the Zig Zag and locked the sleeper back on once Bailey was back to the mat. Bailey was out and the ref called the match. The pro-”Speedball” crowd booed, but then cheered Nemeth.

This was a really cool, creative match, albeit a bit short. I’m sure no one would have minded an extra five minutes in this one. The two shook hands afterwards.

They aired a custom video package for the four way women’s tournament today. Janai Kai, Marina Shaffir, Lady Frost and Lindsay Snow all took part.

Women’s Tournament: Opening Round
Lindsay Snow defeated Lady Frost via submission (heel hook)

Lindsay Snow came out to that Vanessa Carlton song which is hilarious. Her and Lady Snow traded low kicks up front. Frost caught Snow with a kick that sent Snow to the floor. Back in the ring, Snow took Frost down with a fireman’s carry then moved to an armbar. Frost countered from that into a RNC. Snow stood up and slammed Frost down to break the hold, then pounced on her and threw a flurry of shots before transitioning into a heel hook and Lady Frost tapped quickly. Lindsay Snow advances in the Women’s Tournament.

Women’s Tournament: Opening Round
Marina Shaffir defeated Janai Kai via submission (Mother’s Milk)

Like Nic Nemeth vs. Mike Bailey, this was a grappler vs. striker type of bout. Shaffir landed a trip early, then a head-and-arm throw soon after. Janai Kai almost landed an up-kick which Shaffir dodged. Kai would then land a middle kick, then a high right roundhouse that sent Shaffir to the canvas. Kai smelled blood and went right in for knees but Shaffir weathered the storm. Kai blasted her with another kick to the face, this time a running straight. Shaffir again survived and would catch Kai with a mule kick.

Kai unleashed a number of kicks and palm strikes and Shaffir ate all of them without a problem while she stared into Kai’s soul. Kai went for another high kick, but this time Shaffir caught it, dropped it, quickly caught Kai’s arm put her down hard with a throw. “The Problem” then locked on Mother’s Milk and tapped Kai out. Good match. Shaffir advances in the tournament.

Charlie Dempsey defeated Matt Makowski via submission (double wrist-lock)

“Weapon X” Matt Makowski caught Dempsey with a low kick early on. Dempsey with a beautiful cradle suplex early. BJJ black belt Makowski was on top in mount position soon after, though Dempsey was able to roll Makowski over with a double-wrist lock. They went back and forth at a pretty rapid pace. 

Makowski later caught Dempsey with a rolling savate kick out of nowhere, then threw Dempsey with a high butterfly suplex that he turned into an armbar on the way down to the mat. Nice.

Dempsey bullied his way into top position, cranking down on Makowski’s wrist while shoving the blade of his forearm into Makowski’s face. Always nasty. There were “BLOOD-SPORT!” chants soon after. Dempsey moved into a Fujiwara armbar; when Makowski tried escaping, Dempsey would transition into a straight armbar. Makowski would strike his way out of the hold. Dempsey locked in a standing ankle lock, but Makowski reveresed that beautifully and caught Dempsey in the RNC. “Tap! Tap! Tap!” Dempsey reversed with a cravat takeover. Makowski moved back to the armbar. 

Makowski landed a spinning back elbow and an enzuigiri kick. Dempsey responded with a stiff European uppercut followed by a German suplex hold and then double-wrist lock. Makowski tapped. This was the best match on the show so far, for sure.

Takuya Nomura defeated Fuminori Abe via TKO (rear naked choke)

These two are a tag team known as Astronauts in Japan. They’re often seen working companies like Big Japan Pro Wrestling, where they were tag champions, and where Nomura was BJW Strong Heavyweight Champion. They’ve both been wrestling for under ten years and are better than most on the market today, without exaggeration. And they’ve been that good for a while now. Fun fact: Abe was trained by Munenori Sawa and had 220 matches in 2023.

They went hold for hold at the top of the match, trading back and forth. Abe landed a hard headbutt. They then started slapping each other really, really hard. Abe did the Rob Van Dam “pick a hand” spot and smacked Nomura.

Nomura later unleashed a cornucopia of lowkicks against Abe’s back before locking him in a straight ankle lock. How did Abe break the hold? A hard closed-fist punch to the head.

We saw blood running from Nomura’s head at this point. He’d catch Abe in a cradle suplex and launch him across the ring. Nomura locked in an abdominal stretch but Abe turned that into an octopus hold.

Abe exploded with a beautiful moonsaulting dropkick. He went for a wind-up punch, but Nomura caught him with two quick palm strikes and a release German suplex. Abe was up immediately and caught Nomura with the wind-up punch. Nomura answered with a headbutt; Abe answered with a stiff one of his own. Wow. The crowd was on their feet and chanting from here.

They were back on their feet trading more shots, this time elbows. Abe caught Nomura with a high kick behind the ear, then a rough knee strike. Nomura stood up and caught Abe with a massive lariat. German suplex from Nomura before standing Abe up and drilling him this time with a dragon suplex.

Nomura cinched in a single-leg crab, but Abe countered that with a straight ankle lock. Nomura tried slapping his way out of the hold, but Abe held on. It wasn’t until Nomura conked him with a headbutt that he broke the hold. Abe was almost knocked out. Nomura slapped on a sleeper until the ref called the match as Fuminori Abe was eventually out. Killer fight. A “THAT WAS AWESOME!” chant broke out afterwards.

Erik Hammer defeated Lou Nixon via submission (armlock)

Bloodsport alumni Erik Hammer scored an early takedown and threw hard shots before Nixon could get back to his feet. Nixon landed a clean knee to the face that dazed Hammer.

Hammer aimed to slow the pace and took Nixon back down to the mat. Neither could grab a leg lock so both were back to their feet again. Hammer with a seoinage throw. Nixon later moved into a head-and-arm lock scarf hold.

Hammer put Nixon down hard with a German suplex and then applied a wrist lock for the tap. I don’t think this was clear to those in the audience or to the commentators and the crowd started booing. This was good but the finish was a little bit funky.

Minoru Suzuki defeated Royce Isaacs via TKO (Gotch-Style Piledriver)

Big “Kaze Ni Nare” singalong before the bell. Both Isaacs and Suzuki are Bloodsport alumni and have helped define what the brand is since Barnett took over. Isaacs is part of the West Coast Wrecking Crew with Jorel Nelson in NJPW, which is where he and Suzuki have crossed paths in the past.

They had a good exchange at the top. When Isaacs was back to his feet, Suzuki flashed that devious smile and invited Isaacs back to the mat to grapple some more. Isaacs took him up on the offer and Suzuki locked him in an armbar and slid to the floor to yank on Isaac’s arm for extra leverage. Suzuki broke the hold, then mosied around ringside, sometimes rolling back into the ring to break the ref’s count. The crowd loved this. Suzuki sat himself down on a row of females in front and posed. Fan service is a wonderful thing and Suzuki is so damn good at it.

The two fought for ankle locks and heel hooks. On their feet, they started trading big elbows. Suzuki chuckled as they hurt each other. Suzuki blasted Isaacs with an elbow that echoed inside the venue. The crowd reacted accordingly with gasps. Isaacs was out for a second, then back in the game in an instant, catching Suzuki with a big pump kick, then a German-to-Half-Nelson suplex. Woah. 

Isaacs went for a double-pump power bomb, but Suzuki swiveled out of it and locked in a rear naked choke before finally putting Isaacs out with a Gotch-Syle Piledriver for the TKO win. 

This was another great fight, and one that really defines what Bloodsport is all about. It was extra satisfying for those who have been watching Bloodsport since the beginning. 

Suzuki offered a handshake, and when Isaacs went to shake, Suzuki pulled it back and dipped out of the ring. Minoru Suzuki, you wily rascal.

Timothy Thatcher defeated Axel Tischer via submission (Fujiwara armbar)

Timothy Thatcher is the only Bloodsport fighter to hold a win over Josh Barnett, which he picked up last year in Los Angeles. Axel Tischer can be seen in Germany’s wXw, which was Thatcher’s old stomping ground back in the day.

The two looked evenly matched as they pummeled for leglocks on the canvas. Thatcher went Snakepit-style and scraped his wrist bone against Tischer’s face, though Tischer maintained his composure and held control. He caught Thatcher with an upkick when Thatcher stood up and went for a standing ankle lock.

Tischer pounced on Thatcher later with a sliding tackle and proceed to shower him with punches. Thatcher later threw a few hard penalty kicks against Tischer’s back. This was a painful looking match.

Tischer locked in a deep hammerlock and threw straight elbows onto Thatcher, who’d then counter and lock Tischer into a high angle single-leg crab before switching to a bow-and-arrow lock. Tischer escaped with a wild forearm to break the hold.

Tischer used a few German suplexes on Thatcher, but Thatcher wouldn’t stay down. They then slapped each other a LOT. Tischer grabbed Thatcher and spiked him with a brainbuster.

When Tischer looked to go in for the kill with another brainbuster, Thatcher exploded out of it and locked in the Fujiwara armbar for a quick tap out. Thatcher picks up another Bloodsport win. This was excellent.

Shayna Baszler defeated Masha Slamovich via TKO (stomps)

Masha Slamovich came to the ring with Jordynne Grace in her corner, while Shayna Baszler entered alongside her WWE tag team partner, Zoey Starks. Baszler wore her gi top and black belt to the ring. The crowd chanted “HO-LY SH*T!” before things kicked off. They were on their feet as the two had a staredown during the introductions. 

The crowd was pro-Masha and anti-Shayna, or maybe, rather, pro-GCW and anti-WWE. Baszler wailed Slamovich and walked to her corner as the match was about to start. Awesome.

They went to the canvas quickly for a high-speed roll. They’d start to fight for leglocks. They fought to a stalemate and crowd started to sound split between the two. 

Watching Shayna Baszler in this setting, it is obvious this is where she shines. Not just at Bloodsport, but in a pure pro wrestling situation like this. She’s a natural and adds so much credibility to what’s going on.

From back control, Baszler started peppering Slamovich with jabs to the ribcage. Slamovich was back up with a flurry of strikes before landing a flying armbar. 

Baszler wrestled back into control and worked the armbar. When she almost had it locked in, Slamovich stacked her and reversed the attempt. The pro-Masha supporters were loud here.

The two traded suplexes. Slamovich had an armbar on, but Baszler slipped out and put her in the rear naked choke with her back hooks in. The crowd booed. Slamovich reversed it, then drilled Baszler with an amazing pump-handle sleeper suplex, then went back to the same RNC hold. 

Baszler escaped and put Slamovich in an ankle lock, but Slamovich tried upkicking her way out of the hold. Baszler then released the hold and exploded with a flurry a stomps so brutal that the referee had to dive in and stop the match. Baszler wins via TKO. The crowd ERUPTED with boos and a “F*CK YOU, SHAYNA!” chant. Great finish. This was very, very good. 

Women’s Tournament: Finals
Marina Shaffir defeated Lindsay Snow via TKO (kick)

Shaffir landed a big head-and-arm throw early. They grappled on the mat until hitting a stalemate on the mat, then stood back up. Snow attempted a triangle choke and Shaffir almost looked like she was going to slam her but she didn’t have to. Shaffir escaped and went for an armbar but this time Snow escaped.

Snow took Shaffir down again, this time with a kneebar attempt. They went back and forth for a few more minutes until Snow took Shaffir’s back. Shaffir stood up, so Snow transitioned to a leg lock attempt. Shaffir shut it down, but still couldn’t escape Snow’s grip. Shaffir figure-four’d Snow’s legs tight and was able to pop her leg free from Snow’s grip. She took Snow down with a trip, then held her in her guard. Snow started dropping elbows, but almost got caught in a triangle of her own before moving back to a straight ankle lock attempt.

Shaffir would slam her way out of Snow’s hold, twice actually. She then took Snow out with a hard kick to the head, sending Lindsay Snow flying out of the ring onto the floor. The ref immediately called for the bell. Marina Shaffir wins via TKO and wins the Bloodsport X Women’s Tournament.

Josh Barnett defeated Johnny Bloodsport via TKO (gutwrench slam)

The crowd was split between both Barnett and “Johnny Bloodsport” aka John Hennigan. It’s easy to forget how tall Johnny is. When Barnett went in for a double leg takedown, Johnny leapt over him, dodging it. He threw some flashy spin kicks next but couldn’t connect.

Barnett was soon in top mount position until giving Johnny some room to stand back up. He took Johnny back down with a double wrist-lock takedown. Johnny showed off flashy capoeira and par kour movements. 

Barnett dragged Johnny to the middle of the ring with a straight ankle lock attempt. Johnny would try to escape but Barnett kept grabbing him and going for holds. Johnny rolled into Barnett who stopped the takedown attempt and held him in a turtle position. Johnny escaped and shot to his feet to put some boots to Barnett on the mat. Johnny worked for a keylock from side mount position as the crowd clapped in support. Barnett rolled out and reversed the hold into a headlock before landing some kicks. Johnny did a capoiera clothesline but didn’t connect all the way, though he was able to lock in a RNC from back mount. 

“The Warmaster” landed a massive backdrop suplex before blasting Johnny with a spinning heel kick which sounded to have shocked everyone. Barnett then slammed Johnny with a gutwrench slam. The ref then called the match. Josh Barnett picks up another Bloodsport victory.

Afterwards, Barnett grabbed the mic and thanked Johnny Bloodsport and the fans. He also announced Bloodsport Bushido in Tokyo, Japan at Ryogoku Sumo Hall on June 22nd which airs TrillerTV and will feature MMA legends like Minoru Suzuki, Masakatsu Funaki, Kazushi Sakuraba, Quentin “Rampage” Jackson and more.

Final Thoughts:

Bloodsport is the best. This was longer than other Bloodsport events, but it felt like it flew by. I enjoyed seeing familiar faces mixed in with new ones, and the ruleset makes for great pro wrestling matches that don’t insult you intelligence. If you’re already a fan of the Bloodsport style, this is a must-watch, of course 

Everything on this card was really good, but the stand-out highlights were Shayna Baszler vs. Masha Slamovich, Fuminori Abe vs. Takuya Nomura, Timothy Thatcher vs. Axel Tischer and Charlie Dempsey vs. Matt Makowski. I look forward to watching the next step Bloodsport’s story on June 22nd in Tokyo.

Josh Barnett explains how he booked WWE’s Shayna Baszler for Bloodsport

Last week, a surprising announcement was made with it being revealed that Shayna Baszler will be competing at Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport X.

This is the first time that a WWE wrestler has been allowed to work a WrestleMania week indie show. Dave Meltzer reports that Paul “Triple H” Levesque has a different mindset on these things than Vince McMahon did, and Levesque made the decision to let Baszler work Bloodsport.

While appearing on the Under the Ring podcast, Josh Barnett said he was able to book Baszler for Bloodsport because of the relationships he’s cultivated over the years:

I guess the easiest way to describe it is just through my relationships with people there [WWE]. That’s really what it comes down to. And with anybody, when speaking of a promotion, you’re always going to want, If you’re going to do anything outside of it, you want a certain level of trust and consideration given to you. And it’s hard to lend your toys out when there’s so much money put into them and the product itself.

In general, of course, we see cross-promotion happening out there in the world of wrestling, but it’s really a big deal when you think about all the different things involved with it and the value of some of the athletes that are going back and forth. But fortunately, through relationships I’ve cultivated over the years, something like having Shayna Baszler at GCW Bloodsport is – it’s a reality now. And I’m just super happy and honored to be able to do it. And I know that Shayna’s going to do fantastic. I should know, I’ve been training her [for] her entire career.

Baszler is facing Masha Slamovich at Bloodsport. It’s a WWE wrestler vs. a TNA wrestler on a show that’s being presented by Barnett and indie promotion Game Changer Wrestling.

Bloodsport will air live on TrillerTV+ starting at 4 p.m. Eastern time on Thursday, April 4. The show is being held at Penns Landing Caterers in Philadelphia.

Nic Nemeth vs. Mike Bailey, Josh Barnett vs. Johnny Bloodsport (John Hennigan), and Minoru Suzuki vs. Royce Isaacs are among the other matches that will be taking place at Bloodsport. The show features MMA-inspired pro wrestling matches that can only end by knockout or submission.