A ten-man tag featuring Strong Openweight Champion “Filthy” Tom Lawlor has been added to Saturday’s NJPW Resurgence card.
Lawlor, JR Kratos, Jorel Nelson, Royce Isaacs and Danny Limelight will take on Lio Rush, Brody King, Chris Dickinson, Fred Yehi and Yuya Uemura.
Rush appears to be next in line for a shot at Lawlor’s NJPW Strong title, confronting him in a backstage segment following Lawlor’s last title defense against Satoshi Kojima.
The match will also mark the beginning of Uemura’s international excursion. He left NJPW last week following a loss to Kazuchika Okada to begin his time abroad.
Resurgence airs on NJPW World and FITE TV on Saturday, August 14 at 11 p.m. Eastern time.
Here is the lineup so far:
NEVER Openweight Championship: Jay White (c) vs. David Finlay
IWGP United States Championship: Lance Archer (c) vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi
Jon Moxley & a mystery partner vs. Doc Gallows & Karl Anderson
Fred Rosser, Rocky Romero & Wheeler Yuta vs. TJP, Clark Connors & Ren Narita
Karl Fredericks vs. Alex Coughlin
Tom Lawlor, JR Kratos, Jorel Nelson, Royce Isaacs & Danny Limelight vs. Lio Rush, Brody King, Chris Dickinson, Fred Yehi & Yuya Uemura
Tag Team Turbulence semi-finals: Violence Unlimited (Brody King & Chris Dickinson) West Coast Wrecking Crew (Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs)
Dickinson and Isaacs were in first for the teams. They mixed it up on the mat early on. Both excel in this style. Isaacs focused on Dickinson’s knee and when he tagged out to Nelson, Nelson would continue working over that same knee. Dickinson was finally able to tag out to King who went to work on Nelson. At one point, Nelson came off the top rope with a flying shoulder block that didn’t do any damage to King, who just shrugged it off. What a beast.
On commentary, Kevin Kelly made sure to let us know that Violence Unlimited were representatives of ROH in this tournament.
Dickinson and King worked over Nelson. Dickinson was good and still sold his knee that the opposing team had worked on earlier in the match. He made sure to let viewers know that the damage done earlier on would affect his offense later on in the match.
Nelson was eventually able to come off the top and take down King with a flying clothesline after King couldn’t make the superplex happen.
Dickinson earned a two-count after a deadlift suplex. We saw some double-team work from King moments later when Kinng lifted up Dickinson in a back suplex position, then slammed him onto Isaacs with a splash.
King picked up the win for his team after a Black Hole Slam and a big lariat onto Isaacs. Violence Unlimited advance to the finals of Tag Team Turbulence.
“The West Coast Wrecking Crew ran into the west coast wrecking ball” King began their post match promo with. Next, Dickinson explained how he is a training partner of Royce Isaacs, and that Isaacs and Jorel Nelson are the real deal. He said that New Japan has the best and most competitive atmosphere which was what they were looking for.
Tag Team Turbulence semi-finals: The Good Brothers (Karl Anderson & Doc Gallows) defeated Yuji Nagata & Ren Narita
Narita and Anderson were in for the teams first. Narita and Nagata later went after Anderson’s left arm. Gallows came in quickly after and put the kibosh on that. Anderson even did Nagata’s “YAZEI!” pose as a taunt towards the former IWGP champion, who stood on the apron.
Much of the middle part of this match was basically the Good Brothers planting Narita in the blue corner and working him over for a while. It wasn’t until Gallows missed an elbow drop that Narita was able to escape and tag out to Nagata, who then cleaned house. Basement dropkick to Anderson’s knees after a fake-out. “Everyone falls for it!,” Kevin Kelly exclaimed.
The finish to this saw Anderson and Gallows put Narita away after a Magic Killer. Gallows had neutralized Nagata after they brawled for a while on the floor. The Good Brothers advance to the finals of Tag Team Turbulence and will face off against ROH’s Violence Unlimited.
After the match, The Good Brothers said they’ve been watching Violence Unlimited from afar and that their tag name was a poor choice of words because it would be they, the Good Brothers, who would be bringing the violence, in fact.
STRONG Openweight Championship match: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (c) (w/ JR Kratos) defeated Satoshi Kojima via TKO (rear naked choke)
Lawlor offered an actual piece of bread to “Bread Club” colonel Satoshi Kojima before the match started. Kojima completely no-sold it, then went for a running lariat right as the bell rang, but Lawlor dodged it. I should note that Lawlor came to the ring wearing a black elbow pad, something he never does. Early on in the match Lawlor whipped off the elbow pad and chucked into the empty crowd—just like Kojima does before he hits the lariat. A total troll-job from Lawlor, this was.
The two went hold-for-hold early on, but Lawlor quickly took control and worked over Kojima’s left arm and shoulder. He had Kojima locked in a Rings of Saturn-type submission at one point until Kojima broke the hold by biting his way out of it. He’d later attempt a slingshot elbow drop down onto Lawlor from the ring apron, but Lawlor slipped out of the way, then dragged him out to the floor and gave him more of a beating. He wrapped Kojima’s left arm around the ringpost and whaled it. Kojima wasn’t able to get back into the ring until the count of 19.
Back in the ring, Lawlor slapped on a figure-four leglock, but Kojima broke it by grabbing the ropes. Lawlor then placed Kojima in the corner and gave him a taste of his own signature machine gun chops, adding to the aforementioned troll-job. Kojima would return fire with machine gun chops of his own.
Kojima was later able to break away and drop Lawlor with a falling DDT onto the apron, which had both men on the floor afterwards. Back in the ring, Kojima put Lawlor back on the mat with another DDT, then flew off the top rope with an elbow drop that earned him a two-count.
Lawlor rallied back, blasting Kojima with kicks and chops. Kojima answered back with a set of Mongolian Chops, a shout-out to long-time TenCozy partner Hiroyoshi Tenzan. He’d then lock on Tenzan’s Anaconda Vice, proving he wasn’t a “one-punch KO artist via lariat” as Kevin Kelly explained. Lawlor broke the hold after crawling to the edge of the ring, placing his foot on the bottom rope.
Kojima would then call for his signature lariat and whip his elbow pad out into the crowd, but Lawlor moved out of the way and caught Kojima with a sleeper hold as he was coming off the ropes. Kojima slammed Lawlor off his back to break the hold, but Lawlor would respond by planting Kojima with a super-uranage for two. He’d then slap on a Roberto ‘Cyborg’ Abreu-style short guillotine lock before transitioning into a more orthodox guillotine choke. Kojima powered out of the choke with a vertical suplex and earned a two-count of his own for it.
Kojima then went for the running lariat again, but when he came off the ropes, JR Kratos grabbed Kojima’s ankle, tripping him. Kratos pretended like he didn’t do anything and walked away, and when Kojima was distracted, Lawlor was able to sneak back in and take Kojima out with a knee strike. He’d then lock on a rear naked choke from back position and put Kojima to sleep, earning Lawlor the win via TKO.
After the match, Lawlor asked who’d be next in line for the STRONG Openweight title. He wondered aloud if Bob Sapp was available, and, yes, I’d buy that for a dollar. But no, it won’t be Sapp because Lio Rush showed up backstage to confront both Lawlor and Kratos. Rush said that since he’d come to NJoA, he hadn’t gotten a fair shake in the tournaments he participated in, like the Super J-Cup in 2020. He said that if Lawlor was a fighting champion, he’d put the title on the line against him. Lawlor and Kratos both gave Rush looks that said “Wow, you’re serious?” After a moment of silence, Rush mentioned he liked Tom’s shorts. Lawlor thanked him. He then consulted with Kratos for a few moments, but Rush didn’t want to wait around. “Notify me, gentlemen.”
Final thoughts:
This was a solid episode that felt more “big-time” than usual. In addition to the Tag Team Turbulence finals between ROH’s Violence Unlimited and IMPACT’s Good Brothers, it seems like we’ll also see “Filthy” Tom Lawlor vs. Lio Rush for the STRONG Openweight Championship sooner than later. Whether that will be on Strong next week or at something like Resurgence next month has yet to be announced.
Filthy Four Daily with “Filthy” Tom Lawlor and I is back with tons to talk about including SmackDown with the return of crowds, New Japan Strong with the first round of the tag team tournament and the announcement of how to enter our NEWEST CONTEST.
Tom Lawlor will defend the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship against Satoshi Kojima on the Friday, July 23 Tag Team Turbulence episode of NJPW Strong.
Kojima issued a challenge to Lawlor to face him following Lawlor’s title defense against Karl Fredericks on the June 25 Strong. Lawlor accepted and the company made the announcement this evening.
Tag Team Turbulence is an eight-team tournament set to kick off on the July 16 edition of Strong. The semifinals will take place on the July 23 show, while the finals will be held on the July 30 episode.
Strong airs Fridays at 10 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World and is available on demand shortly after airing.
Here are the lineups for July’s episodes of Strong:
NJPW Strong Road to Tag Team Turbulence, Friday, July 9 —
Josh Alexander vs. Rocky Romero
PJ Black vs. Alex Coughlin
The DKC vs. Barrett Brown
NJPW Strong Tag Team Turbulence, Friday, July 16 —
First round match: The Good Brothers vs. Clark Connors & TJP
First round match: Yuji Nagata & Ren Narita vs. Fred Yehi & Wheeler Yuta
First round match: Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs
First round match: Brody King & Chris Dickinson vs. JR Kratos & Danny Limelight
NJPW Strong Tag Team Turbulence, Friday, July 23 —
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Satoshi Kojima
Tag Team Turbulence semifinal: Nagata & Narita/Yehi & Yuta vs. The Good Brothers/Clark Connors & TJP
Tag Team Turbulence semifinal: Kevin Knight & The DKC/Jorel Nelson & Royce Isaacs vs. Brody King & Chris Dickinson/JR Kratos & Danny Limelight
NJPW Strong Tag Team Turbulence, Friday, July 30 —
A former Battle Riot winner is set to take part in this year’s version of the match.
MLW has announced that Tom Lawlor will be one of the participants in this year’s Battle Riot. There have now been 28 entrants announced for the match. It’s taking place at MLW’s television tapings at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania this Saturday.
This will be the third Battle Riot match that MLW has presented. Lawlor won the inaugural Battle Riot in 2018. LA Park then won the match in 2019.
The Battle Riot is a 40-man battle royal that starts with two wrestlers in the ring. A new participant is then added every 60 seconds. Eliminations can occur via pinfall, submission, or being thrown over the top rope.
Lawlor went on to become MLW World Heavyweight Champion with the title shot that he got for winning 2018’s Battle Riot. The Battle Riot winner gets a World title shot whenever they want it. The title is currently held by Jacob Fatu.
Here’s the updated list of entrants for Saturday’s Battle Riot:
Figure Four Daily with myself and “Filthy” Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including Tom’s big win last Thursday for PFL and the pressing question: is he retiring from MMA?
Also, we also talk Smackdown from last Friday and how it all played into WWE Hell in a Cell, the latest on New Japan Strong, and tons more.
A fun show as always so check it out in beautiful HD at video.f4wonline.com! Click JOIN and become TOP TIER today!
The 14-year MMA career of “Filthy” Tom Lawlor has come to an end.
The emotional 38-year-old put his gloves in the cage following his unanimous decision win over Jordan Young at PFL 5 Thursday despite still being in the fourth and final playoff spot with the victory.
Lawlor, co-host of Filthy Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez on this website, leaves the sport with an 11-8-0-1 mark with no MMA titles to his name.
Known for wearing various outfits to weigh-ins and to the cage during the time when UFC allowed such things, Lawlor was the victim of a two-year suspension from USADA in late-2016 for failing for Ostarine. He denied ever knowingly taking the drug, but any appeals and release requests so he could fight elsewhere were denied.
The UFC then released him less than two months before his suspension was up. Following a 2019 Ostarine violation by another fighter that resulted in a much shorter suspension, USADA admitted that if the case came up later, Lawlor’s punishment wouldn’t have been as long.
After becoming a three-time National Collegiate Wrestling Association champion at the University of Central Florida, Lawlor’s fighting career started in March 2007 and after six fights, he got an opportunity to be on the eighth season of The Ultimate Fighter (Frank Mir vs. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira). As part of Team Mir at light heavyweight, he lost in his first fight to Ryan Bader via first round knockout.
During his 6-5 run at middleweight, he picked up wins over Patrick Cote, CB Dollaway and Gian Villante while losing to eventual middleweight champion Chris Weidman and Corey Anderson.
After losing to Deron Winn on the undercard of the Oscar De La Hoya-promoted Tito Ortiz vs. Chuck Liddell III show, he signed with PFL. He had lost his debut against Antonio Carlos Junior (aka “Shoeface”) before Thursday’s win.
Lawlor resumed his pro wrestling career in 2014 and has already made a name for himself with his run in MLW (World Champion, Opera Cup winner, Battle Riot winner) and New Japan Pro Wrestling where he is the first-ever Strong Openweight Champion. He also frequently works for various indie promotions.
.@FilthyTomLawlor removes his gloves and places them at the center of the cage — despite currently sitting in fourth place in the 2021 PFL Light Heavyweight standings, which would qualify him for the Playoffs. Keep an eye on this situation as it develops. #2021PFL5
ESPN+ pic.twitter.com/hY0Gw3ETPU
AJZ is a new face who debuted recently. Big bodybuilder-type who can move relatively well. Wears a gold bandana and puts his hair in a bun like a genie.
He and Connors grappled mid-ring early on with Connors getting the better of it. At about halfway through, they took the match to the floor and brawled there for a while, trading hard forearms. Back in the ring, the taller AJZ rushed Connors and took him down, then laid in a dozen wild punches from a mounted position.
The gritty Connors returned AJZ’s offense later with a few vertical suplexes. AJZ did a springboard kneedrop. Connors wrapped this match up after a snap powerslam and a backdrop bomb, pinning AJZ in dominant fashion, then touching him up a bit after the bell to let AJZ know whose house this really was.
El Phantasmo defeated Wheeler Yuta
This was El Phantasmo’s return to the show after recently showing up on IMPACT.
This was Wheeler Yuta’s second appearance on NJPW Strong, where he had a good match with Rocky Romero earlier this year. He came to the ring wearing a flashy Mortal Kombat-style facemask.
Phantasmo was verbally bullying the ring boys before the match. He also attempted to get a chant going through clapping despite no fans in attendance. Announcer Alex Koslov suggested it may have been for the fans at home. The match itself got underway a few moments later. Both were impressive in the opening minutes on the mat. ELP finally got the upper hand after raking Yuta’s eyes.
From here, the pace began to quicken. Yuta went for a frankensteiner but Phantasmo used a cartwheel to move out of the way. He landed a nice dropkick that knocked ELP out of the ring. Phantasmo then chose to stay outside until the count of 19, recovering as much as he was legally allowed to while on the floor.
Back in the ring, Phantasmo challenged Yuta to a Test of Strength, but it was a trick, because ELP twisted Yuta’s wrist backwards as soon as they locked fingers. He took Yuta down and worked over his arm a bit before climbing to the top rope for his signature rope-walking routine. ELP followed up a nipple-twist with a cross bodyblock off the ropes. That’s not a sentence I expected to type today.
Yuta rallied back with an Olympic Slam after Phantasmo had worked him over a few minutes longer. Yuta landed a crossbody block off the top ropes for two. More than ten minutes had elapsed at this point. Yuta attempted a possible superplex or another type of top-rope maneuver but ELP bit Yuta’s fingers, then knocked him off the ropes. ELP landed Thunderkiss ‘85 for a close two-count. Yuta came back and scored a close call after a German suplex with a bridge. He locked on a modified STF next, but again, ELP bit his way out of danger. He then landed Sudden Death, his “loaded” superkick, to put Yuta down for the count. Good match.
In a backstage promo, El Phantasmo said that Wheeler Yuta was yet another “indie darling” has felt the “most accurate and deadly” finisher in all of pro wrestling, Sudden Death. He had the cameraman point downwards so ELP could show off his right foot, which he claimed was “money.”
Between matches, a quick vignette aired for NJPW’s Ignition tour, which starts next week on NJPW Strong.
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: “Filthy” Tom Lawlor (c) defeated Chris Dickinson to retain
If you’re a fan of Josh Barnett’s Bloodsport, this is must-watch. This felt like something straight out of Japan in the mid-1990s.
NJPW aired a nice package of the build between these two ahead of the match. The story is that Chris Dickinson, who was initially a member of Team Filthy, was basically outed from the group once he challenged Tom Lawlor for his Strong Openweight title, which Lawlor captured by winning this year’s New Japan Cup USA.
JR Kratos and Danny Limelight cornered Lawlor tonight.
Both Lawlor and Dickinson were cautious throwing strikes early on. Lawlor landed a low kick. He accused Dickinson of pulling his hair after the two exchanged holds on the mat. Dickinson aka Bas Rutten Jr. threw more kicks as the bout went on. After Lawlor missed a spinning heel kick off the ropes, Dickinson blasted him with a shoulder block.
The match spilled out onto the floor next. Lawlor begged off for long enough to throw a cheap kick into Dickinson’s gut. The two brawled on the apron until Lawlor was able to catch one of Dickinson’s kicks and wrap it over the ropes, effectively trapping Dickinson and allowing Lawlor to snap Dickinson’s neck over the cable with a stun gun.
Lawlor bullied Dickinson into the red corner, working him over not with MMA technique just lots of back-alley fists. Dickinson powered up after a while of this, and after eating a few more shots from Lawlor, he cursed him out and unloaded a half-dozen chops on Lawlor, forcing him into the same red corner. Dickinson stormed at Lawlor, who he had whipped into the opposite corner, but Lawlor caught him, then put him down with a spinebuster for two. Ten minutes had gone by at this point.
Lawlor then went after Dickinson’s knee and quickly had him locked in a figure-four leglock until Dickinson broke the hold by grabbing the ropes. Lawlor later locked Dickinson in a sleeperhold while sitting on the top rope for that extra leverage, but Dickinson was able to counter out of the hold. He then super-plex’d Lawlor from the top rope back into the ring. Beautiful execution. Lawlor sold like he’d just broken his back or tailbone.
Dickinson charged at Lawlor in the corner with lariats, but Lawlor countered out and locked in another sleeperhold. Dickinson reversed, then planted Lawlor with a Death Valley Bomb for a close two-count.
Danny Limelight jumped onto the apron, but Dickinson took him out with a forearm. JR Kratos was standing on the apron of the opposite side of the ring. When Dickinson walked over to get into it with Kratos, Brody King arrived and took Kratos out himself. King, clad in a fresh NJPW jacket, is actually a part of a new faction with Dickinson in ROH called Violence Unlimited. He and Kratos brawled to the back, away from the ring.
Lawlor had collected himself and locked Dickinson in a sleeperhold again. Dickinson rolled over his shoulder to escape the hold, then spiked Lawlor with a brainbuster for two. The ring announcer made the 15-minute call moments later. Dickinson landed an enzuigiri before locking in a STF hold. Lawlor looked to be in trouble before he was able to break the hold with a rope-break.
After slapping himself in the face a few times, Dickinson deadlifted Lawlor into a release German suplex. Dickinson went for another, but Lawlor but this time Lawlor blocked it by grapevining his leg around Dickinson’s. He was able to collapse Dickinson onto the mat and lock in a Kimura hold before spiking him with a Tenzan-styled tombstone piledriver for a two-count.
Lawlor began slapping Dickinson around. Dickinson didn’t take kindly to this and began unloading sharp chops and palm strikes of his own. I wonder how these two felt the morning after this. Lawlor locked Dickinson into a cravat hold and threw knees before launching him with a release Northern Lights suplex. He used a stalling Olympic Slam before floating over into a guillotine choke. Dickinson got his ankle on the bottom rope for a break. 20 minutes had elapsed at this point.
Dickinson threw a flurry of kicks, but Lawlor was able to catch one and lock in another sleeper. Dickinson reversed, but Lawlor kept wrist-control and used a tomoe nage sweep that gave Lawlor back control, which allowed him to again lock in the sleeperhold. I’ve only seen that sort of move used in BJJ, so this might be the first we’ve seen of this technique on television.
The fiery Dickinson screamed and went for a running lariat, but Lawlor sidestepped and locked on the sleeper one more time before dumping Dickinson on his head with a vicious sleeper suplex for the pin. Lawlor retains on his first defense of the Strong Openweight title.
Danny Limelight and Tom Lawlor celebrated backstage afterwards, but were quickly interrupted by “Alpha Wolf” Karl Fredericks, who walked up to Lawlor and gekiochi-kun’d Lawlor’s title before calling him a “chump” instead of “champ.”
“That’s pretty cool, Tom.” Fredericks eyeballed Lawlor’s title while Lawlor waved him off. Fredericks’ holds a pin over Lawlor from the multi-person tag match which stipulated that whomever pinned Lawlor in said match would earn a Strong Openweight title shot against the winner of tonight’s bout between Lawlor and Dickinson.
After Fredericks left, Limelight celebrated Lawlor being the longest-reigning (also only) Strong Openweight champion. Lawlor referred to Fredericks as “Blue Wolf” during this, which is a deep-cut reference for any old school NJPW or PRIDE fans out there. It’s also funny because Blue Wolf was awful.
Final thoughts:
Go out of your way to watch the main event, because it was one of the best matches on the show this year. It was definitely better and felt more important than anything from NJPW’s recent three-match run at Korakuen Hall this week. Hats off to both Lawlor and Dickinson who gave us a solid, no-frills main event that felt important. Despite losing, Dickinson feels stronger than ever on NJPW Strong, while Lawlor is now firmly the first non-Bullet Club regular to function as top heel on the show. I hope this isn’t considered a conflict of interest, but “Filthy” Tom was freakin’ great in this.
MLW has confirmed four more wrestlers who will be part of the roster for their new season.
During the second week of MLW’s “2021 Open Draft,” it was announced that indie wrestler Alex Kane has signed with MLW. It was also announced that Gringo Loco, King Mo, and “Filthy” Tom Lawlor will be returning for the new season.
Kane will be making his MLW debut when the promotion’s new season kicks off with a set of television tapings at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Saturday, July 10. It was stated that Kane will be representing Dan Lambert’s American Top Team in MLW, which King Mo is also a member of.
Kane’s nickname is “The Suplex Assassin.” While speaking with MLW’s Alicia Atout, Kane said he competed in amateur wrestling and rugby in college. He was trained in professional wrestling by AR Fox and made his debut in September 2018.
Kane told Atout that he wants to face MLW National Openweight Champion Alexander Hammerstone.
It was announced during the first week of the Open Draft that Davey Richards, Marshall & Ross Von Erich, Gino Medina, and King Muertes (formerly known as Mil Muertes) will be part of the roster for MLW’s new season. Richards has signed with MLW and will also be making his debut at July’s TV tapings in Philadelphia.
The Philadelphia tapings will be MLW’s first event with fans in attendance since March 2020.
NJPW has revealed the full lineup for this week’s Road to Collision episode of Strong.
El Phantasmo returns to action on this week’s show. He will team with Hikuleo against Lio Rush and Fred Rosser. Phantasmo has not wrestled on Strong since February. He was most recently in action on last week’s episode of Impact Wrestling.
In Friday’s opener, Rocky Romero will take on the debuting AJZ.
Already announced for the show’s main event, Tom Lawlor, Chris Dickinson, JR Kratos and Danny Limelight will face Karl Fredericks, Brody King, TJP & Clark Connors in an elimination match. Eliminations can occur by pinfall, submission, DQ or over the top rope with both feet hitting the floor.
Strong airs Fridays at 10 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World and is available on demand shortly after airing.
Here is Friday’s lineup:
Elimination match: Karl Fredericks, Brody King, TJP & Clark Connors vs. Tom Lawlor, Chris Dickinson, JR Kratos & Danny Limelight
NJPW has revealed the main event for each Collision episode of NJPW Strong this month.
Tom Lawlor will make his first defense of the NJPW Strong Openweight Championship against fellow Team Filthy member Chris Dickinson on the Friday, May 28 edition of the show.
On the Friday, May 21 episode, Fred Rosser will take on Hikuleo in a no disqualification match. The two also met in the New Japan Cup USA 2021 tournament, where Hikuleo came away with the victory.
On the Friday, May 14 show, Lawlor, Dickinson, JR Kratos and Danny Limelight will face Karl Fredericks, Brody King, TJP & Clark Connors in an elimination match. Under NJPW rules, eliminations can occur by pinfall, submission, DQ or over the top rope with both feet hitting the floor.
The main event for the Friday, May 7 episode had already been announced, as Jon Moxley and Dickinson will face Yuji Nagata and Ren Narita. Nagata will also challenge Moxley for the IWGP United States Championship on the Wednesday, May 12 edition of AEW Dynamite.
Strong airs Fridays at 10 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World and is available on demand shortly after airing.
Here are the lineups announced for Collision so far:
Friday, May 7 —
Jon Moxley & Chris Dickinson vs. Yuji Nagata & Ren Narita
Misterioso vs. Jordan Clearwater vs. Royce Isaacs
Kevin Knight & The DKC vs. Barrett Brown & Adrian Quest
Friday, May 14 —
Elimination match: Karl Fredericks, Brody King, TJP & Clark Connors vs. Tom Lawlor, Chris Dickinson, JR Kratos & Danny Limelight
Friday, May 21 —
No disqualification match: Fred Rosser vs. Hikuleo
Friday, May 28 —
NJPW Strong Openweight Championship: Tom Lawlor (c) vs. Chris Dickinson
Filthy Four Daily with “Filthy” Tom Lawlor and I is back with tons to talk about including his PFL fight this past weekend, what’s next in MMA for him, recaps of last Friday’s SmackDown with Daniel Bryan banished, New Japan Strong, and tons more.
A fun show as always so check it out in beautiful HD at video.f4wonline.com. Click JOIN today!
Tom Lawlor defeated Brody King to win the New Japan Cup USA and become the NJPW Strong Openweight Champion on tonight’s NJPW Strong.
Lawlor became the first-ever Strong Openweight Champion after beating King with a rear naked choke. King was unable to respond to the referee, who called for the stoppage finish at 20:05.
Lawlor already has a surprising first challenger lined up as well.
After being presented with the New Japan Cup USA trophy and the Strong title belt, Lawlor cut a promo with Team Filthy allies Chris Dickinson and JR Kratos by his side. He declared that no one in NJPW thinks they can beat him or is man enough to. Dickinson took the microphone from Lawlor and said that he is stepping up as Lawlor’s first challenger.
Lawlor ran through Ren Narita, Hikuleo and King to win the 2021 New Japan Cup USA tournament. Dickinson lost to King in the tournament’s first round.
Lawlor joins KENTA as New Japan Cup USA winners after the tournament was introduced in 2020.
The finals are set for the 2021 New Japan Cup USA.
Brody King and Tom Lawlor advanced to the finals with wins on tonight’s episode of NJPW Strong. King defeated Lio Rush with a Gonzo Bomb in 7:38, while Lawlor pinned Hikuleo in 8:58 with an inside cradle to punch his ticket to the final round.
King and Lawlor will meet on the Friday, April 23 episode of Strong to decide the 2021 New Japan Cup USA winner, and also to crown the first NJPW Strong Openweight Champion.
King carved his path to the finals with wins over Rush and Chris Dickinson, while Lawlor defeated Hikuleo and Ren Narita.
In 2020, Cup winner KENTA became number one contender to Jon Moxley’s IWGP United States Championship and received a right to challenge briefcase. NJPW has gone in a different direction this year with the introduction of the Strong Openweight title, while Moxley has challenged Yuji Nagata for his next US title defense.
On tonight’s episode of NJPW Strong, Brody King, Hikuleo, Tom Lawlor and Lio Rush advanced to the semifinals.
In the main event, King defeated Chris Dickinson in 10:42 after hitting a lariat. In the semi-main, Hikuleo defeated Fred Rosser with a Tongan Driller in 6:22 to advance. Lawlor used a rear naked choke to submit Ren Narita in 13:19 to move on. In the Strong opener, Lio Rush beat Clark Connors with a Rush Hour in 9:57 to stay alive in the tournament.
The semifinals will take place on the Friday, April 16 episode of Strong. Rush will face King, while Lawlor will take on Hikuleo.
The 2021 New Japan Cup USA finals will be held on the Friday, April 23 episode of Strong. In addition to winning the New Japan Cup USA, the winner of the tournament will also be crowned the first NJPW Strong Openweight Champion.
Here is the remaining tournament lineup:
New Japan Cup USA 2021 semifinals, Friday, April 16 on NJPW Strong —
Lio Rush vs. Brody King
Tom Lawlor vs. Hikuleo
New Japan Cup USA 2021 finals, Friday, April 23 on NJPW Strong —