KENTA, Tomohiro Ishii set for ROH-NJPW War of the Worlds tour

KENTA and Tomohiro Ishii are the first two NJPW wrestlers confirmed for this year’s ROH-NJPW War of the Worlds tour.

ROH announced today that KENTA and Ishii are set for all four shows on the War of the Worlds tour. The dates and locations for it are:

  • Wednesday, May 6: Buffalo RiverWorks, Buffalo, New York
  • Thursday, May 7: Ted Reeve Arena, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Saturday, May 9: Wings Event Center, Kalamazoo, Michigan
  • Sunday, May 10: The Odeum Expo Center, Villa Park, Illinois

Tickets for all four shows went on sale to HonorClub members this morning. They’ll go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. local time this Friday.

KENTA is also set for ROH Supercard of Honor XIV on Saturday, April 4. In his first match for ROH since 2009, KENTA will be teaming with Taiji Ishimori against Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff at that show.

Aside from being in the pre-show Honor Rumble match at G1 Supercard last year, the War of the Worlds tour will be the first time Ishii has wrestled for ROH since 2018.

ROH and NJPW have partnered together for War of the Worlds every year since 2014.

ROH announces dates for War of the Worlds tour with NJPW

Ring of Honor and New Japan Pro Wrestling are again teaming up for a War of the Worlds tour this year.

ROH announced the dates for this year’s War of the Worlds events today, with the tour taking place in May and consisting of four shows. The dates and locations for the tour are:

  • Wednesday, May 6: Buffalo RiverWorks, Buffalo, New York
  • Thursday, May 7: Ted Reeve Arena, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Saturday, May 9: Wings Event Center, Kalamazoo, Michigan
  • Sunday, May 10: The Odeum Expo Center, Villa Park, Illinois

Tickets for the tour shows will go on sale to HonorClub members next Wednesday (March 4) at 10 a.m. local time. They’ll then go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. local time next Friday (March 6).

ROH has partnered with NJPW for War of the Worlds every year since 2014. The NJPW wrestlers who will be taking part in this year’s shows haven’t been revealed yet.

Supercard of Honor XIV on April 4 will also feature some involvement from NJPW wrestlers, including Jay White facing Marty Scurll, KENTA & Taiji Ishimori teaming against Jeff Cobb & Dan Maff, and Will Ospreay, Rocky Romero & Amazing Red challenging Bandido, Flamita & Rey Horus for the ROH Six-Man Tag Team titles.

ROH and NJPW have also traditionally partnered together for ROH’s Global Wars events, though last year saw ROH team with CMLL for Global Wars Espectacular.

ROH War of the Worlds Grand Rapids results: Taven vs. Haskins

ROH came to Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday night for the next of their War of the Worlds events live on the HonorClub streaming service. Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana were the announce team for the night. 

Coast 2 Coast (LSG & Shaheem Ali) defeated Karl Fredericks & Alex Coughlin

Good opener. Almost all grappling at the top of this one, all pretty good. Riccaboni mentioned Ali has been training in BJJ recently, implying he may attempt some jiu-jitsu tonight. He and LSG did some cool double-team work early on. Ali did a mini-2 Cold Scorpio splash on Coughlin. 

Fredericks has been the hot-tag guy in all of his tag matches on War of the Worlds this week. He’s very good already, but sometimes his limbs flail when he does dropkicks or power moves.

Coast to Coast won after a double-team pop-up swing-out slam. 

Women of Honor World Champion Kelly Klein defeated Stacy Shadows to retain her title

Klein offered a handshake before the match, but Shadows shoved her. Shadows is a lot bigger than Klein. They brawled outside the ring early. Klein’s matches feel a lot easier to watch when she’s able to have a more physical match, like she did tonight with Shadows. 

Shadows got great heat midway through this. She talked a lot of trash as she stomped and wailed on Klein. Klein returned the attack with a lariat. Riccaboni mentioned that Klein recently threw out the first pitch at a Cincinnati Reds game. 

Shadows completely biffed on a spot with Klein: when Klein went for a shoulder block, Shadows took a bump before they even touched. Klein was still near the ropes and Shadows was in the middle of the ring. It was really bad, but they moved right through it. The crowd didn’t totally give up on the match yet. 

Klein landed a big German suplex on Shadows. Shadows later went for a Vader Bomb but missed, so Klein used a running double knee strike to win the match. Shadows shook Klein’s hand afterwards. This could have been Klein’s best match in a long time, sans that glaring miscued botch Shadows made. 

The Allure attacked Shadows after the match and branded their logo on Shadows’ head with lipstick. Klein made the save and went after Angelina Love. Those two had a good pull-apart and the crowd started chanting “let them fight.” ROH Dojo students came out to break things up.

This was hands down the best Allure segment so far. It’s not saying much but it feels like an improvement even from a few days ago.

– Riccaboni announced that PCO would not be competing tonight. He was initially scheduled to wrestle Mark Haskins of LifeBlood but wasn’t medically cleared in storyline.

Riccaboni gave a good kayfabe explanation about why The Kingdom aren’t allowed at ringside anymore. He explained that in the past, The Kingdom could always “legally” be at ringside because they had their licenses and did their paperwork, but ROH rescinded that right, which resulted in them not being allowed at ringside for the time being. 

Dalton Castle defeated Cheeseburger and Clark Connors in a triple threat match

Heel Dalton Castle came out before Cheeseburger and Connors’ match. He said he was eating tiramisu in the back watching the show and he didn’t like what he saw in the ring. He said Connors looked like “half eaten vanilla fro-yo.” Castle said the audience deserve better and ordered the two to leave.

People started chanting for Cheeseburger. He offered Castle a chance to wrestle both of them in a three-way match. Castle said he couldn’t because he had a deviated septum and was now upset that Cheeseburger brought it up. He said they both didn’t deserve to be in the ring with him.

Cheeseburger then brought up Castle getting beat by Rush in 16 seconds at MSG last month. I guess that was all it took for Castle to agree to the match.

Castle manhandled Cheeseburger, but he and Connors were destined to mix it up. They traded really hard chops and forearms. Castle then blasted Connors in the face with a yakuza kick outside the ring, all in slacks and slip-on shoes. Castle is going out of his way to wrestle a meaner style, a little bit more intense and with less bells, whistles, and Boys. 

Connors is scary strong. He looks like he’s been wrestling for a long while. At one point, he did rolling gutwrench suplexes to Cheeseburger until Castle German suplexed both of them at the same time, similar to what Daisuke Sekimoto has been doing in Japan. 

Castle back body dropped Cheeseburger onto Connors on the floor. Connors later made a serious comeback and landed a stiff spear on Castle, then put him in the Boston crab. Cheeseburger tried chopping Connors while he sat in the submission hold, but Connors no sold it. He was eventually able to break up the attempt, but Castle made a comeback and eventually gave Cheeseburger a Bang-A-Rang to win his first match back since Madison Square Garden. 

This turned out to be pretty good. Castle looked very good in the ring, more aggressive than usual. Connors will be a superstar in a few years, that’s a no-brainer. Cheeseburger played the babyface role to a T here and added a nice high-flying flavor to the match.

The Kingdom (Matt Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) defeated Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) & Hikuleo

Both teams talked trash in the middle of the ring before the bell. Cabana warned families watching at home to turn the volume down if the Guerrillas of Destiny are on, as they tend to curse a lot.

No one locked up for the first few minutes. They all talked trash and tagged in and out, both leaned hard into the heel vs. heel vibe. Both teams kept cheating. Hikuleo looked to be a foot taller than everyone in the ring. The crowd loved his chops and went nuts when he went after O’Ryan in his corner. 

The Kingdom came back and triple-teamed Tonga for while. Tonga used a spinning neckbreaker and was able to tag Hikuleo back in. I think Hikuleo is soon going to supersede Loa as the second best of the brothers.

When Loa and Tonga hit the Doomsday Device on O’Ryan, The Briscoes came out and walked to the ring. While Loa and Tonga got into it with The Briscoes at ringside, Marseglia passed the ROH title belt to Taven and he clocked Hikuleo with it. Marseglia scored the pin while GOD and The Briscoes brawled their way back to the dressing rooms.

The lights went out and Mark Haskins came down. He called Taven out, basically explaining how he’s upset that he couldn’t wrestle PCO for the ROH World title tonight and it’s because Taven cheated his way out of his title defense against PCO this past Thursday in Toronto.

Taven initially said no until Haskins said that when Michael Bennett and Maria Kanellis left him was when Taven lost his balls. Taven got angry and agreed to the match. This was actually an excellent segment. 

Flip Gordon defeated Rhett Titus

This match was not originally slated for tonight, but since Gordon will not be competing in the NJPW Best of the Super Juniors tournament starting next week, he appeared for ROH tonight. 

Riccaboni and Cabana talked about how Titus is going to enter the upcoming CMLL bodybuilding tournament in Mexico. He might as well, huh? Titus got in the ring and on the mic explained that he was going to show the crowd his three best poses. The lights went out before his third pose and Gordon’s music hit. 

People went pretty wild for Gordon when he came out. At one point, he skinned the cat through the middle of the ropes, then did a springboard dropkick where he somehow slipped on the top rope but still stuck the move perfectly, pretty much. Titus tapped as soon as Gordon locked on the FTF. This was fine. 

Los Ingobernables de Japon (SANADA & EVIL) defeated The Bouncers (Brawler Milonas & Beer City Bruiser)

To give you an idea of how over LIJ are in the United States, Colt Cabana acknowledged how the crowd was into — of all things — an arm wringer that EVIL used early on. You’re doing a good job when people “ooh” and “aah” when you do an arm wringer. 

The Bouncers offered LIJ some beers before the match. EVIL and SANADA took sips and spit beer into the big guys’ faces and the bell rang. 

The Bouncers did comedy spots early on. Milonas rubbed his butt in SANADA’s face in the corner, and later Bruiser did his “I can’t bite, I ain’t got no teeth!” spot.

SANADA locked Bruiser in an upside down Paradise Lock with some assistance from the bottom rope, then SANADA dropkicked him. LIJ hit a big double suplex onto Milonas, then used a Magic Killer on Bruiser for three. 

Tracy Williams defeated Rush, Eli Isom, and PJ Black in a four corner survival match

This was an excellent “bang-bang-bang” type of match, sequences upon sequences within sequences. The stip here was that the winner would win a future ROH World title shot.

Everyone in this match went out of their way to make this really good. Isom and Rush were really impressive together, as were Williams and Black. 

Isom is crazy good for how short a time he’s been wrestling. Rush’s rhythm in the ring is more natural when there are extra guys in the ring. 

Rush did a tope con giro onto everyone on the floor and Cabana called it as: “This is what it sounds like when bulls cry.” Rush was booed when he did his Tranquilo pose, but within 20 seconds they were chanting his name. 

PJ Black did a top rope quebrada and a springboard 450 into the ring. Williams did a jumping piledriver to Black and the crowd started chanting “this is awesome.” Rush did the Hiromu Takahashi running dropkick from the apron to the floor onto Black.

Williams and Isom had a heated exchange in the ring. Isom did a modified DDT at one time and got an extremely close two count. Williams used another piledriver for the win.

They explained on commentary that Rush sacrificed his body on the dropkick to the floor, which was why he couldn’t make it into the ring to break up Williams’ pin attempt. 

– Riccaboni and Cabana announced the very unfortunate news about legendary luchadore, Silver King, who passed away on Saturday.

ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated Mark Haskins to retain his title

What a match. Taven tried to jump Haskins before the bell, but Haskins kicked him to the outside and dove onto him with a tope suicida. Haskins landed a stiff Penalty Kick off the apron early on.

It’s easy to forget how acrobatic Taven is. From the get-go, this was an entirely different match than the one he had with PCO on Thursday. 

Haskins dominated much of the first part of this match. Taven used rope breaks to break up a few pin attempts. Taven turned the tide and began going after Haskins’ arm. Haskins did a terrific job selling it. If you’re looking for a younger wrestler in the world that pretty closely resembles Dynamite Kid in the ring, Haskins might be that guy. 

Taven seems to always have at least a cluster of diehard fans at ROH shows. He got good heat during this match, but he also went out of his way to acknowledge his non-Melvin fans. 

Taven continued going after Haskins’ arm. He through him onto the ring entrance stage and tried to steal a countout victory, but Haskins made it in at 19. 

Taven used a tight Fujiwara armbar on Haskins until Haskins inched over to the bottom rope for a break. Haskins fought back and eventually landed a high jumping leg lariat to knock Taven into the corner. Haskins later used a bridging armbar in the center of the ring, but Taven was able to make it to the ropes. Taven did a great job of wrestling in such a way where you actually bought into an ROH newcomer like Haskins winning the title.

Taven missed a frog splash and Haskins went back to the bridging armbar, but Taven countered into a cradle pin. They traded cradles until Haskins landed a sit-out Death Valley Driver for another close two. Whenever Taven was in trouble, he’d gouge at Haskins’ eyes or do something morally questionable in the ring. 

Haskins hulked up and landed a big diving double stomp on Taven for a 2.5 count this time. When Haskins went for a Death Valley Driver on the apron, Taven somehow used a crazy looking Climax on the edge of the apron, then did Just the Tip and hit a frog splash for 2 and nine-tenths. People lost it for this fall and started chanting “R-O-H” and slamming their hands on the barricade.

Haskins was finally able to lock in the Sharpshooter on Taven, but Bully Ray walked out and started yelling at him. He said something about Haskins’ wife, which distracted Haskins and allowed Taven to low blow him, then hit another Climax for the pin. The crowd groaned and sighed. It sucked the excitement out of the room. 

I really hope the future storylines pay off. It looks like they’re going with a Kingdom vs. LifeBlood program, with Tracy Williams getting a title shot soon after his win tonight. If there’s no payoff, or if it’s a flop, ROH may have just let lightning in a bottle slip through their fingers. 

Taven got on the mic after the match and cut a promo, saying that if the crowd thinks he sucks so much, then what do they think about all the people he beat? He jaw-jacked for another minute until PCO came out and destroyed Taven with a rebound tombstone piledriver and a “PCO-sault.”

Aside from the schmozzy finish, this was quite possibly one of the better matches of the year so far. Haskins was spectacular. Even more impressive is that Taven worked a tag match earlier and had a wild brawl of a bout with PCO days before, then had this match. If ROH gives out awards to their employees at the end of the year, I think Taven might be up for company MVP.

– Kenny King came out with ring announcer Amy Rose, who has been his handler this week. He did his blind gimmick again. He said he has super-senses now ever since Great Muta misted him at MSG, and tonight he could sense that Bobby Cruise was wearing blue underwear. Yeah. King joined the commentary team when he finished.

Satoshi Kojima, Yuji Nagata, Hirooki Goto, Jay Lethal & Jeff Cobb defeated Bully Ray, Shane Taylor, Silas Young & The Briscoes

This was a good fan-service match, like something you’d see on NJPW World, not HonorClub. It had the same feel and followed a similar layout. 

Fans threw streamers into the crowd during the entrances. Lethal and Jay Briscoe were in first and had a solid opening exchange. Goto and Mark Briscoe were in next. 

Lots of people chanted for Kojima when he tagged in. Bully Ray screamed at him for a while until Kojima screamed “SHUT UP!” back at Ray. Ray has the loudest voice in pro wrestling, maybe. It’s a blessing. 

Nagata tagged in and Ray tagged out to Young. It was pretty similar to how they worked a few nights earlier on the tour. 

The action in this was hard-hitting, slow and steady. Seeing Taylor in the ring next to Bully Ray makes it easy to see that, in many ways, Taylor is like a modern version of Bully Ray. Both are aggressive and loud, they’re roughly the same size, and they seem to be able to work with anyone in a variety of styles. 

Kojima and Ray got into it again later on in the match. Ray never seems lost when he’s in the ring with foreigners, which might be Goto’s big issue, always good but always a bit hesitant in the ring out of his comfort zone. 

The heels cornered Cobb and worked him over. After a couple of minutes, Cobb was able to deadlift Taylor with a German suplex. He tagged out to house-of-fire Kojima, who landed a massive Koji Cutter on Ray for two. 

Nagata took out Young with an exploder suplex. Nagata was then taken out by Jay Briscoe with a dropkick, and Jay was taken out by Cobb with a spinning back suplex. Ray snuck in the ring and landed a big back suplex of his own on Cobb. 

Mark Haskins ran out to the ring at this point and stole Ray’s chain. Cobb then did a big tope con giro to the floor, and Kojima landed a lariat on Ray to win the match. 

This was good and all, though it’s a shame that the World title match didn’t go on last instead. 

Final thoughts — 

This was a very watchable show, but the shining star match was Taven vs. Haskins, for sure. The finish was what it was, and it might have done more harm than good to both Haskins and Taven. That’s something we can only judge when ROH is given a fair chance to tell the rest of their story.

The other standout from tonight was the four corner survival match. Rush shined, PJ Black has been on a roll since last month pretty much, and both Williams and Isom looked better than ever. 

ROH War of the Worlds Toronto results: Matt Taven vs. PCO

ROH was in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Thursday for the second of their War of the Worlds events live on the HonorClub streaming service. Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana were the announce team for the night. 

Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa & Hikuleo defeated Alex Coughlin, Karl Fredericks & Clark Connors

This was a solid opener. The crowd was way into the Tongans and chanted “G-O-D” as they walked to the ring. It sounded like a handful of women were screaming for them when they came out. 

Coughlin and Loa were in first. Coughlin did some nice Greco-Roman waist locks and transitions. Tonga tagged in and cursed a lot as he wrestled. Coughlin worked him over for a few minutes until Tonga landed a hard lariat and tagged out to Loa.

When Hikuleo tagged in moments later, he brutalized Coughlin with chops and the crowd ate it up.

Karl Fredericks finally tagged in minutes later and cleaned house with a number of power spots, including a big spinebuster and a Stinger splash, which Tonga responded to with one of his own.

Connors and Hikuleo had a short but interesting exchange. The visual contrast between them in terms of body size and look is so stark that it’s inherently interesting. Hikuleo got the better of this sequence, though, and did a double-handed Sky High, sort of like D’Lo Brown’s, for the win. It didn’t look pretty, but it wasn’t completely botched either. I look forward to seeing more of those two together, specifically. 

Yuji Nagata defeated Silas Young by DQ

Young belittled male fans around the ring before the bell. The audience chanted his name and was pretty loud for him before the match. They also chanted “Last Real Princess” at Young during this. 

Young feigned a handshake but landed a European uppercut on Nagata instead. Nagata returned the attack with a number of kicks and forearms. Riccaboni did a really nice job of explaining how Nagata was influential in bringing the hybrid Pancrase or proto-MMA style into pro wrestling in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s. 

Young played heel well throughout this and the crowd loved to boo him. He hit Misery later on, a reverse swinging Death Valley Driver type of move, but accidentally knocked referee Paul Turner out while he was spinning Nagata around.

Young took this opportunity to grab ring announcer Bobby Cruise’s chair and bring it into the ring. Nagata insisted that Young use the chair on him, acting fearless, until Young decided to pretend like Nagata used the chair on Young. He acted like he’d just been knocked out.

Nagata then teased using a chair for a bit, looking to the crowd for their approval, until he decided that he’d also fake being hit with a chair. He unfolded the chair, put it over his head, and laid on the mat like Young took him out. When Turner regained consciousness, he called for the bell and disqualified Young. Nagata won via DQ. 

Afterwards, an angry Young attacked Nagata, but Nagata fought back and put him in a cross armbreaker while rolling his eyes into the back of his head (shiro-me in Japanese).

Good match. Both Young and Nagata worked really hard to get the fans involved and sounded pretty satisfied with the result. 

Los Ingobernables de Japon (SANADA & EVIL) defeated The Kingdom (TK O’Ryan & Vinny Marseglia) 

Quality match. O’Ryan looked into the camera before the match and claimed he figured out SANADA’s Paradise Lock. The two were first in for their teams. There were lots of chants for SANADA and later EVIL in this. 

EVIL and Marseglia exchanged chops when they were first in together. The Kingdom started double-teaming EVIL in their corner and got decent heat from the audience. They were super into LIJ. Big “let’s go EVIL” chants during the aforementioned’s comeback.

SANADA took some punishment from The Kingdom for a few minutes until he landed a TKO on O’Ryan. Pretty shortly after, LIJ used a Magic Killer on Marseglia to win.

This was another good one. It wasn’t close to LifeBlood vs. LIJ from Wednesday, but it was solid. SANADA and EVIL were significantly over once again.

– Rhett Titus came out to join Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana on commentary. Riccaboni made a hilarious reference to the WBF and said that Titus was ready to take on Gary Strydom. Titus accidentally put on his headset backwards before the next match. These are sometimes the best parts of these HonorClub shows.

Rush defeated PJ Black

This was pretty good considering how short it was. Black and Rush have a natural chemistry together and were really smooth from the get-go in this one. Lots of rope running, a bit of flying, and some brawling to the outside. Black dominated much of the first half of this until Rush used a slingshot German suplex off the ropes. 

Rush hit a belly-to-belly suplex on Black into the turnbuckles, then did the Bull’s Horns basement dropkick in the corner for the win. This looked severe and Black did an amazing job of selling it, halfway falling out of the ring for it. It seems like Black’s push starting on TV this week may have just been a quick build to this Rush match. 

– Dalton Castle came out to the ring and cut a promo with a mic with sequins all over it. His jacket and shoes were covered in sequins too. He was upset that only two people recognized him in Toronto today. He explained that he is “Boy-less” for the first time in his life and called the Boys “vending machine trash babies.” 

The Briscoes (Jay & Mark Briscoe) defeated LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)

The teams shook hands before the match. LifeBlood did some nice double-teaming at the top of the match. They’re some of the most valuable players ROH has right now, at least in terms of in-ring work. 

No matter how hard The Briscoes go as heels, it seems the fans can’t help but cheer and chant for them. Mark did a big corkscrew moonsault to the floor midway through this. Haskins and Jay Briscoe were awesome together and would make for a killer singles match.

LifeBlood did a double crisscross dive — Haskins doing a tope suicida and Williams doing a top rope plancha to the floor. Jay Briscoe’s cut above his eye, the one he got on Wednesday during the kerfuffle with Guerrillas of Destiny, opened back up after this spot. 

Williams used his D’Lo Brown-style frog splash on Jay for two, but The Briscoes later hit their version of the Doomsday Device on Williams for the win. 

Bully Ray walked to the ring after the match and complimented the Briscoes on their win. He then referenced something Williams said on Twitter, something about Williams wanting Ray to find him. Ray said that’s why he came out, to find Williams, who had been conveniently taken out by The Briscoes just moments beforehand.

Ray then told Haskins to tell his wife he said hello. Haskins went into the ring with a chair — the honorable LifeBlood member with a chair — and teased an attack. Ray egged him on until Ray rolled out of the ring to a chorus of boos. He’s still a master heel on the mic. 

Both this segment and the match itself were good and the crowd liked it. It was exactly what it needed to be on this card.

– After a brief intermission, Kelly Klein explained to the crowd that she is a fighting champion and that she wants the best that women’s wrestling and Toronto has to offer. The Allure then came out.

Angelina Love was first to address Klein from the apron. She reminded Klein that she was a former “six-time World Champion.” She then said she was from Toronto and went on a cheap pop spree, dropping a Tim Horton’s reference, then said something about the Raptors.

Love then explained that she’s now an American citizen and that Klein would have to wait until they were back in the States for them to wrestle. Klein attacked Love, but The Allure escaped the ring quickly. Klein called them b*tches before they’d left and it got a loud reaction.

This segment was way better than whatever happened on Wednesday in Buffalo. It looks like they’re aiming at a Klein vs. Love program soon.

 – Kenny King came out and acted like he was blind again. He’s still selling Great Muta’s mist from last month. He joined Riccaboni and Cabana on commentary for the next match.

Jay Lethal defeated Satoshi Kojima

Riccaboni called Kojima the spiritual leader of Bread Club, which led to a funny bit between everyone on carbs during the wrestler introductions. The crowd chanted for Lethal before the match. 

Another top-notch match. They traded chops, shoulder blocks, and low kicks to kick things off. Kojima never seems to hold back on those chops, huh? Lethal did his Jericho springboard dropkick, followed by a suicide dive to the floor. 

Lethal worked over Kojima’s knee, tenderizing it for a figure four leg lock attempt later on. Kojima returned with more chops and stomps. He even told referee Todd Sinclair to shut up in English. The crowd was into that.

Lethal came back and continued to work over Kojima’s knee. I thought I heard Kojima scream “f*ck!” at one point. He returned with even more chops and later a DDT onto the apron. The crowd sounded like they enjoyed Kojima but were especially into Lethal. There was even a dueling chant of “Let’s go, Lethal” vs. “Both these guys.”

Kojima hit a Koji Cutter on Lethal for two. There was a nice string of bread references on commentary during this. 

At one point, when Lethal went for the Lethal Injection, Kojima nailed him with a lariat to the back of the head. After a few more quick exchanges, Lethal was finally able to stick the Lethal Injection and grab the win. Both got a standing ovation as the two shook hands afterwards. 

Shane Taylor defeated Jeff Cobb, Hirooki Goto, and Brody King in a four corner survival match to win the ROH Television Championship

The size-to-athleticism ratio in this match was off the charts. Taylor is such an underrated heel. He and gachimuchi Jeff Cobb kicked things off. When Cobb is in NJPW he’s been referring to himself as gachimuchi, which loosely translates to something like “sexy beefcake” in English. 

Cobb and Goto had the first proper exchange. After trading hard blows for a long-ish while, Taylor came back into the ring and took out both with a double lariat. He then teased a dive to the floor, but the 6’4” King caught Taylor with a frankensteiner, then did a tope con giro to the floor afterwards. 

Back in the ring, Taylor and King had the next sub-match and were excellent together. Goto later took Taylor out with a lariat, then King took Goto out with a lariat of his own. Seamless symmetry throughout this.

Cobb hit a spinning deadlift back suplex on Goto. Taylor did a Canadian Destroyer on King, but then ate an ushigoroshi off the top. The four all exchanged reversals and big power moves for a few minutes until Cobb hit a Tour of the Islands on King. Taylor came into the ring, broke up the pin, then hit Greetings from 216 on King to win the ROH TV title, with Cobb losing the title without being pinned.

Big shocker to both the crowd and myself. This was very good.

ROH World Champion Matt Taven defeated PCO to retain his title

The entrance screen monitor read: “Human.Being Not.Found” before PCO came out. The camera pulled back and showed PCO chained to a gurney, like Hannibal Lecter, or Sabu in the early ‘90s. His trainer Destro was with him, wearing an insane vampire-esque get up. He electrocuted PCO to “wake him up” as the crowd chanted his name.

Before the match, ROH played a short promo video of Taven talking about how he’s the one who is immortal, not the undead PCO. He wanted to prove that PCO is, in fact, human. Taven said that he fears no man.

Taven insisted the two shake hands before the match. PCO insisted Taven hit him in the back. Taven did — but it didn’t do much. PCO urged Taven to hit him in the back again, so Taven went to hit him in the face.

When PCO was knocked to the floor, he urged Taven to jump onto him: “Come on, jump!” The crowd chanted for Taven to jump. He teased it, but didn’t dive onto him until a minute later, but PCO caught him in mid-air and then chokeslammed him onto the apron. 

What happened next was something I think had to have been a first. PCO went to dive on Taven who was on the floor, but he “short-circuited,” as Cabana put it, and did a tope suicida to the adjacent side of the ring, or the wrong side. He did an intentional dive onto nothing.

Destro yelled at PCO, telling him it was the wrong side, then ordered him to get back in the ring. PCO followed this up with a cannonball through the ropes onto Taven. Wow. 

PCO did some high kicks to Taven while he sat on the apron. He then sat Taven onto a chair and chopped him in the chest outside the ring. He did some more insane stuff before The Kingdom came out right before PCO was about to land a moonsault.

TK O’Ryan got on the apron and distracted the ref, and then Marseglia held what looked like a deer antler on the mat, which allowed Taven to slam PCO eye-first onto the sharp antler. Taven actually kept talking about poking PCO’s bad eyes out on commentary on the show in Buffalo.

PCO bled a lot after this. Taven persistently went after his eye for a while, gouging and punching it with a closed fist. The chants for PCO grew, and the stomping and the clapping got louder. PCO finally came back with a pop-up powerbomb — a nod to fellow Quebecer Kevin Owens — then did a “running” (really more of a ”walking”) tombstone piledriver. He did his somersault senton to Taven on the apron.

Outside the ring, Taven planted PCO’s face onto an unfolded chair with a Climax. PCO made it back into the ring at the count of 19. Taven then did a sunset flip powerbomb to PCO to the floor. I’ve already written it but, really, wow. Taven hit an unreal looking frog splash, picture-perfect, for only two. The crowd lost it for PCO after this. 

PCO finally landed his monstrous moonsault but couldn’t adjust to pin Taven. When PCO finally did try to pin him, Taven was able to put his foot on the rope to break the count. 

They did a slight schmozz with The Kingdom getting into it with Destro. PCO went to the floor and powerbombed Vinny Marseglia onto a table that didn’t break. When referee Todd Sinclair was distracted by the fracas below, O’Ryan slipped a railroad spike to Taven, who then stabbed PCO in the bad, bloody eye. He got the pin, though it looked like PCO kicked out just at or a hair after the three count.

Sinclair called for the bell and The Kingdom dashed to the back, PCO in the ring a baffled, bloody mess of a Not-Human. 

Final thoughts —

From top to bottom, this was a solid show, like textbook solid. There wasn’t a bad match. Every segment was at least watchable — even the Allure segment. 

The main event was the standout for how spectacular it was, and I mean that in the truest sense of the word in that I honestly don’t think I’ve seen a match at all like PCO and Taven just had. 

While the finish may have been predictable, the execution was on point and PCO was still hot with the crowd. The TV title match was more conservative in comparison but was very good, and the Shane Taylor surprise win looks like they’re building to a Cobb vs. Taylor rematch in the future. 

The War of the Worlds tour continues this Saturday night from Grand Rapids, Michigan on HonorClub.

ROH War of the Worlds Buffalo results: Three title matches

ROH was in Buffalo, New York on Wednesday for the first show of this year’s War of the Worlds tour. Ian Riccaboni and Colt Cabana were the announce team for the night. 

PJ Black defeated Alex Coughlin 

Good opener. ROH is in the middle of pushing Black now. He scored a win on this week’s TV over Eli Isom, and the narrative they’re pushing is that he has changed his devious ways and is more honorable now. Coughlin is one of the NJPW LA Dojo trainees under Katsuyori Shibata.

The two shook hands before the match. The crowd quietly studied the two as they traded submissions in the beginning. Black used a number of more lucha-infused subs, while Coughlin’s offense echoed what we often see in NJPW’s Young Lions matches these days.

The audience began to heat up when Coughlin and Black started exchanging hard chops. Coughlin used a deadlift gut wrench suplex. More hard chops and strikes after this. Coughlin’s chest looked pretty bloodied up by the end.

Black landed Wildness, a brutal-looking moonsault stomp from the top rope, to win the match. It wasn’t a mat classic or anything, but it was a solid opener. 

Women of Honor World Champion Kelly Klein defeated Kate Carney to retain her title

Carney is from Buffalo and nicknamed “ The Sparkle Hunter.” Klein got some pyro during her entrance.

Once the match started, the lights went out and the Allure faction came out. As their music played, they all showed off and did poses on the stage, shaking their rear ends and such, then walked over to join Riccaboni and Cabana on commentary. This was all after the bell had rung.

The crowd would sometimes get into the match when Carney, the hometown heroine, showed some offense. Angelina Love and Velvet Sky took over commentary and plugged their Instagram a bunch. Cabana explained to the ladies that his mother wants him to marry a nice Jewish woman someday. If you haven’t noticed yet, not much happened in the match. A few moments later, Klein hit K-Power for the win. Love called it boring. Gee, I wonder why?

Klein challenged Allure after the match and they had a 30-second posedown, with Klein holding her belt in the air and the Allure not doing much on the apron. It was all very WWE/TNA.

Rhett Titus came out to flex and pose before joining the announce team for the next match. If Titus wrestled in the 1940s, he’d be disqualified on the spot for being too greased up.

The Kingdom (TK O’Ryan & Vinny Marseglia) defeated Karl Fredericks & Clark Connors

Fredericks and Connors are two other NJPW LA dojo trainees. They’re built like football players. 

O’Ryan put Connors in a headlock early on and yelled “Yeah, wrestle that!” to the crowd. No one reacted. O’Ryan chopped Connors a few times and Connors no-sold it. Fredericks tagged in and worked over Marseglia with submissions and hard strikes for a while. The Kingdom made a comeback midway through and used some neat double-team combos, like a senton plus leg drop deal onto Connors.

Marseglia talked trash to Connors as he sat in the corner. I’m not sure if Marseglia was really loud or the crowd was just really quiet. Fredericks got a hot tag in later on in the match and landed a huge dropkick on Marseglia. 

The Kingdom did House of a Thousand Horses (not “Corpses,” like the movie) to both Lions and picked up the win.

The main takeaway from this match is that Fredericks and Connors are already really, really good, like scary good. The crowd almost bought into them winning at one point when Fredericks locked on a Boston crab and kept no-selling Marseglia’s slaps to the face. It was almost strange to watch them in the ring with the Kingdom since they wrestle such a lighter-looking style. 

Shane Taylor defeated Hikuleo

Short but not bad at all. Hikuleo offered a handshake beforehand but Taylor spit in his hand, so Hikuleo went after Taylor with a barrage of kicks and back elbows.

Early on, when Taylor was on the top rope, Hikuleo used a running yakuza kick to Taylor’s face, which seemed to land flush. His foot had to be at least 9 or 10 feet in the air. The crowd started slamming their hands against the barricade after this.

Taylor is a great heel. His jaw-jacking in the ring sounds natural, never forced or awkward. He bullied Hikuleo for a bit until Hikuleo landed a huge Samoan drop (Tongan drop?). Just a few moments later, after a big Hikuleo lariat, Taylor used a running Greetings from 216 (a riff on Bam Bam Bigelow’s Greetings from Asbury Park, a fire-thunder driver) for the win.

Hikuleo must have trained his ass off when he was injured last year because he’s improved greatly, and in a short amount of time. 

Los Ingobernables de Japon (EVIL & SANADA) defeated LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams) 

Very good match. There were loud EVIL chants before the bell and during the match. Like, really loud ones. Williams still has his shoulder brace on. They exchanged forearms at the start.

SANADA might have gotten even louder chants when he got into the ring — total star treatment tonight from the Buffalo crowd. He and Haskins were in next and had a killer forearm exchange. SANADA then put both LifeBlood members in the Paradise Lock and literally dropkicked their asses. The crowd absolutely loved this.

Haskins and Williams recovered quickly. They wore EVIL down with double-team attacks. LIJ were treated like the faces here even though LifeBlood have been positioned as primo ROH babyfaces. That’s more on the booking than on those two, who were very good in this. Both are underrated at the moment, particularly Haskins.

SANADA and Williams got in a few moments later and exchanged stinging chops. Williams hulked up and ripped off his shoulder brace, but SANADA got the better of the exchange. EVIL continued the chopping, but Williams was able to land a diving Rocker Dropper from the second rope. He tagged Haskins in and tore things up, topping off an offensive sequence with a couple of tope suicidas to the floor. The crowd was way into this.

Williams landed a D-Lo Brown style frog splash for two on SANADA. EVIL found his way back in, and after a few more of his moves, got even more chants. He even mean-mugged the ringside camera: “Everything is EVIL,” the Big Purple Machine said. 

Haskins landed a sit-out Death Valley Driver for two. Williams and SANADA were in next and exchanged hard forearms. The last few minutes were hot after this. Haskins used a running, flying knee off the apron onto EVIL, then Williams put SANADA in an ankle lock. SANADA fought back and whipped himself out of the lock and Williams into the ropes, where Williams’ head met a chair, courtesy of EVIL on the outside. This was booed loudly — there were loud sighs of disappointment in the context of the match. Haskins broke up the pin, but then LIJ used two Magic Killers on both Haskins and later Williams for the win.

Riccaboni announced that regardless of the outcome of their title match with Jonathan Gresham & Jay Lethal tonight, Guerrillas of Destiny will face the Briscoe Brothers this weekend at the War of the Worlds TV tapings in Villa Park, Illinois.

Rush defeated Silas Young

Dalton Castle came out beforehand and sat at the timekeeper’s table for this. Young trash talked pretty much every fan in the front rows before the match. He looked like he was about to challenge Rush to a test of strength, but Rush shoved him into the ropes and gave him a shoulder block, then did a shotgun dropkick that launched Young to the floor.

The two brawled around the ring for a bit, with Young later getting the better of the fisticuffs. He then beat on Rush for a few minutes longer, both inside and outside the ring. Young hung a folding chair around Rush’s neck and slammed him into the ring post.

Rush was out for a short bit but then fired up, apparently totally fine after having his neck Pillmanized, and went on to beat the crap out of Young outside the ring. He even took a trash can and threw it at Young.

Rush hit a really hard corner dropkick, the Bull’s Horns, for the win. Castle got on the apron and he and Rush stared each other down. They seem to be continuing the program between these two guys into the near future. 

ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, Brody King & PCO) defeated Satoshi Kojima, Yuji Nagata & Jeff Cobb to retain their titles

Matt Taven joined Riccaboni and Cabana on commentary. PCO and Scurll received the loudest chants before the match, though the audience seemed to love everyone.

King and Cobb had a pretty insane exchange at the beginning. They were moving like junior heavyweights — drop down, leapfrog, do it again, all of that business. King used a frankensteiner to cap the sequence, which led to a giant “holy sh*t” chants from the crowd.

PCO and Kojima had a nice exchange that lit up the crowd. People love PCO. He did a tope suicida through the ropes early on. 

Nagata and Kojima worked over PCO’s arm for a long portion of the match, mainly using arm breakers and armlock submissions. PCO was finally able to make a comeback and used his good arm to chokeslam Cobb and tag out to Scurll.

Scurll, who looks to be wearing new custom white wrestling boots, briefly cleaned house. King did a big tope con giro to the floor, then Scurll helped launch PCO onto the opposite team with a back body drop to the floor. 

Villain Enterprises went on a tear next and did tons of innovative power moves. Cobb returned the attack with a massive *double* back suplex to Scurll and King. Nagata put the boots to Scurll next, then locked him into a the shiro-me (“white eyes”) sitting armbreaker submission until King and PCO came to the ring to break things up.

Nagata later used an exploder from the top rope for a close two count. Scurll attempted a chicken wing but ate an enzuigiri from Nagata. There were more chants for PCO with “this is awesome” chants peppered in. Kojima and PCO exchanged machine gun chops. 

The match ended hot after a monstrous moonsault from PCO. This was a really good fan-service match. Taven was pretty funny on commentary. He’ll face PCO for the ROH World title on Thursday night in Toronto. 

Vinny Marseglia and TK O’Ryan came out and attacked Villain Enterprises afterwards. Taven came down from the announce booth and hit PCO with his belt, but PCO sat up like the Undertaker, which scared Taven out of the ring.

ROH Tag Team Champions Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) defeated Jonathan Gresham & Jay Lethal to retain their titles

Kenny King came out with sunglasses and a walking stick. He was pretending to be blind still from getting misted by the Great Muta at the MSG show, after the Honor Rumble. 

GOD jumped Gresham and Lethal before the bell. Who are they, Suzuki-gun? Gresham and Lethal quickly returned the attack with simultaneous suicide dives through the ropes. Gresham then hit a big crossbody block onto Tonga for two. Gresham and Lethal wrestled like they’ve been tagging for years in this. They did a very cool enzuigiri-dragon screw leg whip double-team spot to Tonga later on.

Tonga wrestled most of the bout for his team. He cursed kind of a lot during the match — a couple F-bombs spewed over a somewhat silent crowd. Riccaboni’s response: “That’s a fine.” 

The crowd would almost always heat up when either Lethal or Gresham were on the offensive in the ring. When Lethal landed a diving elbow drop, the still “blind” King asked, “Was that a shooting star press?”

This had a nice finish: when Loa distracted the refs when he tried bringing the tag titles into the ring, he tossed one of the belts to Tonga, who then cracked Lethal in the back of the head with it as he went for the Lethal Injection. When Tonga went for a cutter on Gresham, Gresham reversed it into a German suplex for a very close two. Tonga then finally landed the cutter, spiking Gresham onto his face and neck for the clean-ish pin.

The Briscoes came out afterwards and Jay Briscoe cut a promo on GOD, saying this was their first and last successful ROH Tag Team title defense. The teams did a good pull apart with the NJPW Young Lions breaking things up in the ring.

Jay got hardway blood over his right eyebrow during the pull apart and got on the mic again, swore a lot more, and claimed that they were going to run circles around GOD this Sunday.

Flip Gordon defeated Bandido

Williams and Haskins came out with fellow LifeBlood member Bandido for this match.

They started out slow, building the match with quicker and quicker exchanges and spot sequences. The crowd chanted “this is wrestling.” They were pretty split between both wrestlers, with a slight majority chanting for Bandido at first. Gordon skinned the cat but also turned it into a basement dropkick into the corner, if that makes sense.

The two went out of their way to move methodically, deliberately. Bandido later did a tornillo in the ring, then a tope con giro to the floor. Later on, Bandido hit a basement dropkick to Gordon’s knee while it was draped over the ropes. 

It’s easy to forget how strong Bandido is. He did a one-handed press slam to Gordon at one point, which looked very impressive. No wonder Gordon has 20 abs now. For the record, Bandido didn’t actually slam Gordon, he just held him in the air for a while until Gordon escaped. 

The match moved back down to the floor a little later. Gordon was selling his knee hard at this point. Bandido was able to muster up the strength to pull off a reverse frankensteiner on the floor. After this they teased a double countout until the count of 19, something I’ve seen too much of these days, mostly abused in NJPW matches. It worked for these two tonight, though.

After trading chops and a few other strikes, Gordon put Bandido into a sleeper hold for a few minutes. The crowd didn’t really respond to this, though they did respond to Bandido’s fallaway slam moonsault from the top rope, which got a quick two count. Gordon used the Star Spangled Stunner, a springboard spinning stunner, for a another close two.

Bandido hit the X Knee, but Gordon connected with a superkick. Gordon picked up Bandido and hit the Flip 5, an F5 turned into a cutter, for the win.

Haskins got in the ring and told Gordon that he had a hell of a match. He put him over huge and offered him a spot in LifeBlood. He told Gordon to think about it and get back to them while he’s at the Best of the Super Juniors tournament next month. The crowd was kind of mixed on this but mostly sounded to be into it. 

I’m shocked to say this but this wasn’t all that good. I’m not saying it was bad, since on paper you’d think it’d be wild, and at times it was, but I don’t think the crowd expected these two to rein it in so much tonight. The crowd must have had higher hopes. I’m not sure what happened here. The highlight was Bandido’s crazy one-armed press slam spot. 

Final thoughts —

I’m glad this felt like more than a house show, which some of the Honor Club events often feel like. It feels like the beginning of a new ROH season, with new faces, new pushes, and more story development. The best match was easily LifeBlood vs. LIJ, while the worst was the dud of a WOH Championship match that was mostly ruined on commentary. 

The War of the Worlds Tour continues tomorrow night on HonorClub from Toronto, Ontario, Canada with ROH World Champion Matt Taven putting his title on the line versus the “Not Human” PCO.

Colt Cabana to defend NWA National title at ROH TV tapings

Colt Cabana’s first defense of the NWA National Championship will take place at this month’s ROH television tapings.

Cabana vs. James Storm for the National title has been announced for ROH’s tapings in Villa Park, Illinois on Sunday, May 12. The show is the final night of ROH’s War of the Worlds tour.

At the NWA & ROH’s Crockett Cup event this past weekend, Cabana defeated Willie Mack to win the National title. James Storm came out to the ring after the match, cutting a promo on NWA management and how they don’t want him to be World Champion. Storm complimented Cabana but said he’s come up with a plan where management can’t silence him — and that’s winning the National title.

The War of the Worlds tour also has stops in Buffalo, New York on May 8, Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 9, and Grand Rapids, Michigan on May 11.

Jay Lethal vs. Jeff Cobb vs. Rush vs. PCO will headline the TV tapings in Villa Park. Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa defending the ROH Tag Team titles against The Briscoes, Hirooki Goto vs. Hikuleo, EVIL & SANADA vs. Satoshi Kojima & Yuji Nagata, and PJ Black vs. Karl Fredericks have also been announced for the tapings.

Six-Man Tag Team title match set for ROH War of the Worlds: Buffalo

ROH has announced several matches for War of the Worlds: Buffalo, including a Six-Man Tag Team title defense by Villain Enterprises.

Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) will defend their titles against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima in Buffalo. The show is the first stop on the War of the Worlds tour.

Cobb is the ROH Television Champion and NEVER Openweight Champion. He defeated Will Ospreay in a title vs. title match at G1 Supercard to win the NEVER Openweight title.

War of the Worlds: Buffalo is taking place at Buffalo Riverworks on Wednesday, May 8. There are three other shows on the tour, with stops in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 9, Grand Rapids, Michigan on May 11, and Villa Park, Illinois on May 12. The Villa Park show is a television taping, while the rest of the tour will stream on HonorClub.

Guerrillas of Destiny defending their ROH Tag Team titles against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham is the main event of the Buffalo show. Here’s the updated card:

  • ROH Tag Team Champions Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) defending against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham
  • ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Villain Enterprises (Marty Scurll, PCO & Brody King) defending against Jeff Cobb, Yuji Nagata & Satoshi Kojima
  • Flip Gordon vs. Bandido
  • Rush vs. Silas Young
  • Los Ingobernables de Japon (SANADA & EVIL) vs. LifeBlood (Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams)
  • Hikuleo vs. Shane Taylor
  • PJ Black vs. Alex Coughlin
  • The Kingdom (Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) vs. Clark Connors & Karl Fredericks

Guerrillas of Destiny vs. Briscoes set for ROH War of the Worlds show

The social media back and forth between Guerrillas of Destiny and The Briscoes is leading to a match on ROH’s War of the Worlds tour.

ROH has announced that ROH & IWGP Tag Team Champions Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) will face The Briscoes at the War of the Worlds show in Villa Park, Illinois on Sunday, May 12. The show is an ROH television taping.

If Guerillas of Destiny are still ROH Tag Team Champions, the titles will be on the line when they face The Briscoes. Guerrillas of Destiny are also defending the ROH Tag Team titles against Jay Lethal & Jonathan Gresham at War of the Worlds: Buffalo on May 8.

Guerrillas of Destiny became the ROH Tag Team Champions by defeating PCO & Brody King, The Briscoes, and SANADA & EVIL in a title vs. title match at G1 Supercard.

Tonga tweeted about the angle with The Briscoes and Enzo & Cass that took place after their match at G1 Supercard: “I love the fact that Enzo and Cass came and jumped the losers of our match. @ringofhonor booking at its finest.”

The Briscoes then cut a promo challenging Guerrillas of Destiny, with Tonga responding by saying The Briscoes were lucky to even be in the match at Madison Square Garden.

The War of the Worlds tour also includes stops in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 9 and Grand Rapids, Michigan on May 11. Guerrillas of Destiny, Yuji Nagata, Satoshi Kojima, Hikuleo, and SANADA & EVIL have been announced for all four events. Hirooki Goto will be wrestling at the shows in Toronto, Grand Rapids, and Villa Park.

ROH War of the Worlds notes: PCO to challenge for World title

– PCO is set to challenge for the Ring of Honor World Championship for the first time in his career.

In a video update that ROH posted today, it was announced that Matt Taven will defend his ROH World title against PCO at the promotion’s War of the Worlds tour show in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Thursday, May 9.

PCO pinned Taven in a six-man tag match at ROH’s Masters of the Craft event on Sunday night. Villain Enterprises (PCO, Marty Scurll & Brody King) retained their Six-Man Tag Team titles against The Kingdom (Taven, Vinny Marseglia & TK O’Ryan) in the match.

Taven won the ROH World title at G1 Supercard, defeating Jay Lethal and Scurll in a triple threat ladder match.

– Lethal & Jonathan Gresham will challenge Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga & Tanga Loa) for the ROH Tag Team titles at the War of the Worlds show in Buffalo, New York on Wednesday, May 8. That was confirmed after Lethal & Gresham defeated Mark Haskins & Tracy Williams in a 30-minute Iron Man number one contender’s match at Masters of the Craft.

Guerrillas of Destiny currently hold both the ROH and IWGP Tag Team titles. They defeated PCO & King, SANADA & EVIL, and The Briscoes in a fatal four-way title vs. title match at G1 Supercard.

– The War of the Worlds tour also has stops in Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday, May 11 and Villa Park, Illinois on Sunday, May 12. ROH has announced NJPW’s Guerrillas of Destiny, Satoshi Kojima, and Yuji Nagata for the tour thus far. Hirooki Goto will also be wrestling at the Toronto, Grand Rapids, and Villa Park shows.

Dates set for ROH-NJPW War of the Worlds tour

Ring of Honor and New Japan Pro Wrestling’s War of the Worlds tour is back for 2019.

ROH announced today that this year’s War of the Worlds tour will begin with a show in Buffalo, New York on Wednesday, May 8. It will continue in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Thursday, May 9 and Grand Rapids, Michigan on Saturday, May 11 before wrapping up in Chicago, Illinois on Sunday, May 12.

The show in Buffalo is taking place at Buffalo RiverWorks, Toronto is at Ted Reeve Arena, Grand Rapids is at DeltaPlex, and Chicago is at The Odeum in Villa Park.

Tickets for the shows will go on sale to HonorClub members at 10 a.m. Eastern time on Wednesday, February 13. They’ll then go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. Eastern on Friday, February 15.

The tour is taking place the month after ROH & NJPW’s G1 Supercard at Madison Square Garden.

ROH has yet to announce which members of the NJPW roster will be appearing at the War of the Worlds shows.

ROH War of the Worlds Michigan results: Briscoes vs. Naito & BUSHI

Submitted by reader Jake Koch

– EVIL defeated Shane Taylor

EVIL was super over with the crowd, while Taylor got “Cleveland sucks” chants due to being from Ohio. EVIL won after hitting a headbutt, a lariat, and Everything is EVIL. The match was plodding at times and probably should have ended three minutes before it did.

– Tenille Dashwood & Jenny Rose defeated Women of Honor Champion Sumie Sakai & Stella Grey

Dashwood was really popular with the crowd. Rose used what looked like a Rock Bottom-type of move to pin Grey. 

After the match, Rose dusted off the Women’s title and tried to hand it to Sakai, but Sakai got offended and slapped her. They brawled and Sakai tried to put Rose in an ankle lock, but she kicked her away before other referees broke it up. Commentary put over Sakai vs. Rose for the title at Sunday’s television tapings in Chicago.

– Hangman Page vs. Punishment Martinez never got started

Page jumped Martinez with a chair from behind and threw the chair in Martinez’s face. Things spilled to the outside and Page quickly set up a table on one of the ring post corners on the outside, driving Martinez through it. The referees ordered Page to leave ringside.

– Marty Scurll defeated Matt Taven, Kenny King, and SANADA in a four-way match

Jay Lethal was supposed to be in the match but was replaced by SANADA due to injury. SANADA was cheered big time.

Scurll won with a low kick and an inside cradle on Taven as Taven argued with and pushed referee Todd Sinclair. There were some comedy bits during the match as SANADA did his hog-tie move on King and Taven, then Scurll tried to do it on him but couldn’t figure out how. Scurll and SANADA teased doing it on Sinclair.

– Roppongi 3K (Sho & Yoh) defeated Motor CIty Machine Guns and The Young Bucks

There were dueling chants of “Motor City” and “Let’s go Bucks,” but Roppongi 3K won in an upset by hitting 3K. It was kind of a cluster match that picked up in the last several seconds. The rules were that anybody could tag anybody in, and the finish came as the Bucks and MCMG were trying to take each other out with their usual crazy moves and Roppongi 3K snuck in to take advantage.

– ROH Television Champion Silas Young & Beer City Bruiser defeated The Boys

Young and Bruiser won after a big splash from Bruiser off the rope and Young hitting Misery.

– SoCal Uncensored (Christopher Daniels, Frankie Kazarian & Scorpio Sky) defeated Flip Gordon, Jushin Thunder Liger & Cheeseburger

Cheeseburger was out and acting all banged up from being attacked by Bully Ray previously. There were huge chants for Liger and tons of streamers thrown for him.

SoCal Uncensored picked up the victory by pinning Cheeseburger after the Best Meltzer Ever. Aside from a few spots when Gordon was in, this felt like a boring old-school house show match.

After the match, Gordon left but Liger and Cheeseburger posed on the ropes. Bully Ray then came out and gave Liger a low blow from behind, powerbombed Cheeseburger, and attacked them with his chain. Gordon made the save and tackled Bully, then superkicked him out of the ring. Liger and Cheeseburger were helped to the back.

– Cody Rhodes (w/ Burnard the Business Bear) defeated Hiromu Takahashi (w/ Daryl Jr.)

Tons of streamers were thrown for this one. Daryl Jr. was on commentary with a headset, though it was thankfully brief. There was lots of comedy at the start as Burnard and Daryl Jr. acted like they wanted to fight each other and security separated them. The ref ejected Burnard and sent Daryl back to the timekeeper’s table. 

Cody got the pin after a vertebreaker. This was good, but I’d say it was only a small notch above house-show level. There was a slow but good pace and everything they did seemed to have purpose.

– ROH Tag Team Champions The Briscoes defeated Tetsuya Naito & BUSHI to retain their titles

The NJPW wrestlers continued to be crowd favorites, but The Briscoes retained with a Jay Driller and a top rope elbow drop on BUSHI. The crowd was into BUSHI, but I think they knew he was taking the pin.

Jay Lethal suffers injury at ROH War of the Worlds: Toronto

Ring of Honor announced today that Jay Lethal was injured during last night’s War of the Worlds: Toronto main event, a six-man tag match where EVIL, SANADA & Hiromu Takahashi defeated Kenny King, Colt Cabana & Lethal.

Lethal was injured late in the match dong a sunset flip powerbomb spot to the floor and had memory issues after the match. He is doing much better today but the company is keeping him off tonight’s War of the Worlds show for fear he may have suffered a mild concussion in Toronto. He was back to normal late last night. 
Lethal had been scheduled for a four-way match in Royal Oak, Michigan tonight with King, Matt Taven, and Marty Scurll. SANADA, who was not booked in a match on the show, will be replacing him in the four-way.

The main event of the Toronto show was originally scheduled to be EVIL, SANADA, Takahashi & BUSHI vs. Dalton Castle, King, Lethal & Flip Gordon, but Castle didn’t wrestle due to injury and Gordon had travel issues that prevented him from making the show. BUSHI accompanied Los Ingobernables de Japon and interfered in the match.

The War of the Worlds tour will conclude with a set of television tapings in Chicago on Sunday.

ROH War of the Worlds Toronto results: Young Bucks vs. Smash Bros

Submitted by Grant Zwarych

– IWGP United States Heavyweight Champion Jay White defeated Punishment Martinez to retain his title

This was a solid match. White pinned Martinez after the Blade Runner.

– Cheeseburger defeated Bully Ray by DQ

Bully Ray came out to incite the crowd and drew great heat by stirring them up. He was just beating Cheeseburger down for the brief time this lasted, with Bully hitting him with a chain for the disqualification. Cheeseburger got zero offense in and it was a 100 percent squash.

– Tetsuya Naito defeated Beer City Bruiser

Naito was over huge with this crowd and pinned Bruiser after the Destino. That was the second time he hit it as the first one did not look good. Naito had his shirt on the whole time as well as wearing some sort of thigh sleeves on both legs.

– The Young Bucks defeated Super Smash Bros (Evil Uno & Stu Grayson)

This match was crazy. There were tons of huge moves from both teams and the crowd was white hot for this one. It was unquestionably the match of the night with nothing else close. The Bucks won with the Meltzer Driver.

As the four were raising each other’s hands after the match, The Briscoes attacked and laid them out. Jay Briscoe took five minutes of mic time and said they’re the ones that rule the place, the best team, and dared anyone try and take the belts from them.

– Tenille Dashwood & Jenny Rose defeated Alexia Nicole & Xandra Bale

Rose pinned one of her opponents. This was right after intermission and there wasn’t much to it, along with some missed spots.

– SoCal Uncensored (Christopher Daniels, Frankie Kazarian & Scorpio Sky) defeated Roppongi 3K (Sho, Yoh & Rocky Romero)

Entertaining match that the crowd was into as well. Romero was pinned after Celebrity Rehab.

– ROH Television Champion Silas Young defeated Hangman Page to retain his title

Prior to the match starting, Punishment Martinez attacked Page. He threw a chair at Page’s head as he was entering the ring — which didn’t look like it felt good — and then laid him out with a Curb Stomp on a chair. As they were taking him to the back, Page came back to the ring before getting counted out.

The match was solid. Page did a very high moonsault from the top rope to the floor, but Young retained with Misery.

– Cody Rhodes defeated Jushin Thunder Liger

Cody won with Cross Rhodes. There wasn’t much to this, but Liger was treated with the huge respect he deserves as a legend before and after the match.

– SANADA, EVIL & Hiromu Takahashi defeated Jay Lethal, Colt Cabana & Kenny King

They had a semi-comedy match that lost the crowd in the main event and many were leaving. I felt bad for them — it was entertaining but had the wrong card placement. This should have been way earlier in the night.

It was originally scheduled to be an eight-man tag with SANADA, EVIL, Takahashi & BUSHI facing Dalton Castle, Lethal, King & Flip Gordon, but Castle didn’t wrestle due to injury and Gordon had travel issues. BUSHI didn’t wrestle but was involved throughout the match.

Cabana wrestled a bit with Daryl (Takahashi’s stuffed cat) and Takahashi protected Daryl’s face to conceal his identity when he was unmasked. Lethal hit multiple dives back and forth across the ring, alternating on each LIJ member.

There was a long vertical suplex spot with Takahashi being the victim as Cabana, Lethal, and King all took turns holding him up and passing him to each other without Takahashi leaving the suplex position. BUSHI blew green mist in Cabana’s face and Cabana was pinned for the LIJ victory.

Matches for ROH War of the Worlds tour announced

Ring of Honor has announced big title matches and interpromotional bouts for their upcoming War of the Worlds tour.

The main event for Lowell, Massachusetts on May 9th has ROH World Champion Dalton Castle defending the title against Matt Taven. This will be the first singles match they’ve had against one another. Also on the card is SoCal Uncensored against the team of Jay Lethal, Jay White and Chucky T. The Young Bucks take on Hiromu Takahashi & BUSHI and Roppongi 3K will tackle Cody, Marty Scurll & Hangman Page in a six-man bout.

Toronto on May 11th has Cody vs. Jushin Thunder Liger. Punishment Martinez will take on Jay White, and Roppongi 3K will challenge ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions SoCal Uncensored.

Royal Oak on May 12th will have a match pitting Punishment Martinez, who has been getting a big push of late, against Hangman Page, who had had some high-profile matches lately. Cody will also battle Hiromu Takahashi on the show.

Austin Aries will finally get a crack at the ROH Television title as he will face champion Silas Young at the Chicago War of the Worlds event on May 13th. Aries returned to ROH at their 16th anniversary show back in March and also appeared at Supercard of Honor, where he confronted Young after he jumped Kenny King, who Young had just beaten to win the title.

The main event for Chicago has a Bullet Club vs. Los Ingobernables theme, as all five members of Los Ingobernables de Japon will square off against Cody, Hangman Page, Marty Scurll & The Young Bucks.

The Lowell, Toronto and Royal Oak shows will be live events streamed on Honor Club. Chicago will be a television taping.

Jay White added to ROH War of the Worlds tour

Jay White is heading back to Ring of Honor.

ROH announced today on their website that White will be part of the upcoming War of the Worlds tour next month. They said that if he were to retain the IWGP United States title against David Finlay on April 24, he will also defend the title on the tour. He is set for the May 9 date in Lowell, Massachusetts and May 11 in Toronto, Canada. 

Other people set for the tour include Jushin Thunder Liger, Roppongi 3K, Rocky Romero, and the entire Los Ingobernables de Japón stable consisting of Tetsuya Naito, EVIL, BUSHI, SANADA and Hiromu Takahashi. Aside from the aforementioned dates, War of the Worlds will also stop at Royal Oak, Michigan on May 12 and will conclude on May 13 in Chicago, Illinois.

White wrestled for Ring of Honor during his excursion with New Japan from 2016-2017, wrestling the likes of Lio Rush, Will Ospreay and Christopher Daniels.