Tony Khan AEW media call notes: Wrestle Dynasty future, Tanahashi vs. Okada, WBD rumors

In a week where Tony Khan made plenty of headlines from his interview with Ariel Helwani, Thursday’s media call to hype up AEW Full Gear didn’t have as much major news items or notes coming out of it.

The full audio is available below.

One interesting bit of information included the future of Wrestle Dynasty (the Forbidden Door-esque card) which debuted earlier this year following Wrestle Kingdom. However, that is not the case for this January.

Khan said he doesn’t think there will be another Wrestle Dynasty event in 2026 even though he said it was successful and is open to doing it again in the future.

Continental Classic field

Khan said he would have loved to announce the Continental Classic field before Full Gear, but wants to gauge health of everyone in the hours following Full Gear. He thought last year’s tournament was better than the prior year’s. He is very proud of the Classic in its young history and has only had to make one change in its history due to injury (Juice Robinson).

WBD future

Asked about thoughts on AEW’s future with all the WBD rumors, Khan says he has to be careful in how he answers given it’s talking about people’s jobs. He said AEW has continued to both grow and integrate into WBD through their changes and that support has been reciprocal. He said AEW is in an advantageous position and an existing place given they are a hugely grateful beneficiary of WBD’s support. He is very optimistic about where this is all going in the future.

“It feels like AEW is in an incredibly strong position,” he said.

Blood & Guts

Khan confirms there will be another women’s Blood & Guts match someday and that the first one “knocked it out of the park.” He said Warner Bros. Discover was “so happy” with it, the fans really enjoyed it, and he was relieved there weren’t more injuries coming out of it. He put over the women for the amount of preparation and time they put into it. He also put over the effort and relief about no serious injuries in the men’s match as well.

Here’s some additional news & quotes:

  • Asked about why he has so many titles in AEW and ROH, Khan didn’t directly answer but alluded to the changes that have taken place since he started AEW which includes Collision, more PPVs and buying ROH.
  • He said the discussion of Kazuchika Okada vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi in his final match came up at AEW Double or Nothing while he and Tanahashi went to dinner. Both sides thought it was both an opportunity for an incredible business success for Wrestle Kingdom and a fitting tribute to Tanahashi.
  • Khan said fans might see more ROH events on YouTube in the future given the success of Death Before Dishonor, Global Wars, etc.
  • Khan said he sees opportunities for the AEW National Champion to defend the title in other promotions domestic & international, confirming that will happen at ROH Final Battle.
  • He reiterated one of his biggest regrets is not having The Briscoes on AEW TV, but says he did the best he could. However, he still thinks about it every day.
  • Khan calls DC ‘possibly the most significant sponsor’ AEW has had.

Click here to listen

Rocky Romero wants future Wrestle Dynasty events to be ‘an even bigger celebration’

Rocky Romero would like for future Wrestle Dynasty events to be an even bigger celebration of all the promotions involved.

The first-ever Wrestle Dynasty took place from the Tokyo Dome on January 5. Presented by NJPW, it was a collaborative event that also featured talent from AEW, Stardom, CMLL, and ROH. The top two matches on the card were Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet and Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd.

Romero holds a Vice President title in both NJPW and AEW, playing a key role backstage in addition to competing in the ring. He also helps with CMLL behind the scenes and was involved in the planning of Wrestle Dynasty.

Appearing as the guest on AEW Unrestricted this week, Romero addressed how future collaborative events like a potential second Wrestle Dynasty could be improved. Romero said he sees a lot of potential in the Wrestle Dynasty concept. He would like to see more talent involved in the future with all of the promotions getting the chance to put their best foot forward.

“I think in the future I would like to see even more of a celebration of each company,” Romero said. “We had the lucha gauntlet, but I would like to see now, like, CMLL talent going for different titles. Whether they’re AEW titles or defending CMLL titles there, which I think would be really cool and really special because we haven’t seen that in a while. Maybe [we] get a glimpse of it once a year when CMLL visits and they do Fantasticamania in Japan.

“I was glad that we had Ring of Honor involved, but I think that’s another thing that we could have. Imagine if [Chris] Jericho defended the Ring of Honor World Championship? That would be cool. You know, there’s a couple of other people that New Japan is working with. Maple Leaf Wrestling, I think that there’s something to do there with Scott D’Amore. I would like to really just make it an even bigger celebration the next time we do it. And really involve more talent and really see more use of everybody’s best foot forward or like best features, you know?”

AEW and NJPW are set to collaborate again with their annual Forbidden Door event taking place from London this summer. The date for that show is Sunday, August 24.

Big Audio Nightmare: Tokyo Dome debrief, Kidd vs. Omega, Chris Charlton controversy

Image: NJPW

The Big Audio Nightmare is back as myself and Mike Sempervive talk about everything happening in the very busy world of Japanese wrestling.

This week’s topics include:

  • Thoughts on Wrestle Dynasty and Wrestle Kingdom attendance and buzz
  • A long form discussion on Shota Umino’s weekend and whether he met the moment
  • The absolutely incredible Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd match
  • Konosuke Takeshita’s big weekend
  • Praise for Yota Tsuji and David Finlay
  • AZM and Mayu Iwatani have a great but too short match…and much more

Click here to listen (sub needed)

January 13, 2025 Observer Newsletter: WWE Raw debuts on Netflix, Wrestle Kingdom 19 & Wrestle Dynasty reviews

Image: WWE

Subscribers can now read this week’s brand-new Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

The lead story is WWE’s debut on Netflix with a three-hour Raw that featured CM Punk vs. Seth Rollins, nostalgia, fans booing Hulk Hogan, and more.

Dave Meltzer also recaps last weekend’s double-dip of Tokyo Dome action with both Wrestle Kingdom 19 and Wrestle Dynasty.

Get that and all the rest of the wrestling news of the week.

Click here to read.

International Women’s Cup winner crowned during Wrestle Dynasty pre-show

Momo Watanabe is the International Women’s World Cup winner.

The Stardom representative emerged victorious at the Tokyo Dome on Saturday night defeating Athena, Willow Nightingale, and Persephone in a four-way match. The finish had Athena looking to score the win against Watanabe. However, Watanabe’s stablemate Thekla pulled Athena out of the ring as the referee was making the count. The distraction allowed Watanabe to strike Athena with a baseball bat, eventually leading to her victory.

As a result of her win, Watanabe has now earned a title match of her choice across ROH, AEW, CMLL, and Stardom.

For the last month, matches have taken place to determine the representatives for the four-way match at Wrestle Dynasty. Nightingale won a mini-tournament to earn her spot in AEW, while ROH’s Athena, CMLL’s Persephone, and Watanabe all won four-way matches.

During the main card of Wrestle Dynasty, Mercedes Mone will face Mina Shirakawa. The match will be for both the New Japan Strong title that Mone holds and for the RevPro Undisputed British Women’s title that Shirakawa holds.

Wrestle Dynasty live results: Kenny Omega returns, ZSJ vs. Ricochet

Wrestle Dynasty streams live tonight on NJPW World featuring talent from NJPW, AEW, CMLL, ROH, and Stardom.

Kenny Omega makes his return to the ring for his first match since December 2023 on today’s show, facing Gabe Kidd in what has become something of a grudge match after the two had a brawl in an angle at Power Struggle late last year.

AEW’s Ricochet will take on Zack Sabre Jr. with Sabre’s IWGP Heavyweight title on the line.

The vacant IWGP Tag Team titles will be on the line in a three-way when Matthew and Nicholas Jackson of The Young Bucks face United Empire’s Great-O-Khan and Jeff Cobb, and the LIJ team of Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi.

NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Mercedes Mone realizes a childhood dream today as she wrestles in the Tokyo Dome against Mina Shirakawa with Shirakawa’s RevPro British Women’s Championship also on the line.

The new NEVER Openweight Champion and AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita puts both titles on the line against Tomohiro Ishii.

New IWGP Global Champion Yota Tsuji puts his title on the line against AEW’s Jack Perry in another championship tilt.

NJPW’s Shota Umino vs. AEW’s Claudio Castagnoli is set for the show. NJPW’s David Finlay takes on AEW’s Brody King in another singles bout.

A lucha gauntlet match will feature four CMLL competitors and four NJPW wrestlers to kick off the main card.

On the pre-show, Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara defend the ROH Tag Team titles against Yoshinobo Kanemaru & SHO.

The International Women’s Cup four-way kicks off the pre-show, with Willow Nightingale vs. Athena vs. Momo Watanabe vs. Persephone. The winner will earn a title shot of their choosing.

**********

Pre-show

Momo Watanabe (with Thekla) defeated Willow Nightingale, Persephone, and Athena for the International Women’s Cup

Watanabe controlled the early goings, dismantling Persephone and Athena with relative ease. Nightingale, however, persevered until Persephone sent her out of the ring. Frenzy after frenzy ensued, with each hard-hitting competitor giving it their all, with Athena’s bully style ruthlessly cutting her opponents down.

Interrupting Nightingale’s offense to Persephone, Athena sought to take advantage of her distracted state. As the ROH Women’s Champion pinned the AEW star, Watanabe’s H.A.T.E. stablemate Thekla pulled the referee out at the last second. Athena’s aspirations for the International Women’s Cup were undercut wholly with a swing from Watanabe’s bat and her signature Peach Sunrise.

A stellar start to the evening, featuring wrestlers not typically seen in NJPW settings, let alone the Tokyo Dome. Albeit brief, this set the stage for a spectacular event. And even still, each woman had the right amount of time and maximized their minutes perfectly. I still wish Billie Starkz defeated Athena for the ROH Women’s Championship, however.

The Sons of Texas (Dustin Rhodes and Sammy Guevara) (c) defeated House of Torture (SHO and Yoshinobu Kanemaru) for the ROH World Tag Team Championship

Rhodes extended a hand of sportsmanship to SHO, who seemingly obliged until Kanemaru ambushed him from behind. The House of Torture stablemates plucked at Guevara like vultures, going so far as to expose the turnbuckle on their side of the ring and tossing the younger half of the champion team into it. Rhodes made a hot tag, playing all his greatest hits on SHO, crushing him with a scoop slam. A Spear from SHO granted Kanemaru a tag of his own, to which he worked the legs of The Natural.

Kanemaru followed his typical dastardly approach with his Whiskey Mist following a Goldust homage from Rhodes. A Dustin Destroyer and a Whiskey Mist of his own saw Rhodes flatten Kanemaru with a Final Reckoning. Guevara punctuated this with a 630 Splash to give Rhodes the pinfall victory.

Following Rhodes on AEW the past few years, I’d hoped to see him with gold and in some special spots on cards. Seeing him in the cerulean blue was the icing to the cake for me. This odd pairing of a match made for an interesting premise, yet both teams worked off each other exceedingly well for a pre-show event. Also, as a fan of the 2023 Deadpool & Wolverine film, I appreciated The Sons of Texas paying homage.

Main Card

Taiji Ishimori won the Eight Man Lucha Gauntlet

Hechicero and Kosei Fujita opened the match, locking up to no avail. Soberano Jr entered, breaking up their attempts before Master Wato sent him to the outside. Mascara Dorada emerged, overwhelming everyone with high-flying maneuvers. His miraculous abilities were quickly quelled by the equally agile Taiji Ishimori, who proceeded to test his mettle with the incoming Titan. The final entrant, El Desperado, strutted in with Junior Heavyweight Championship gold droped over his shoulder.

Seeing the prize on the horizon, each NJPW and CMLL entrant in the gauntlet charged for Desperado, blasting him in succession with their signature moves. Chaos erupted in the gauntlet, with tope flips and dives abound to the outside. Dorada was the last to soar, as Desperado and Fujita grappled on the mat. Ishimori broke up their test of sport by tossing the referee onto them, sealing the deal with a Gedo Clutch to Desperado for the win.

This was excellent fun by some of CMLL’s best talents and the sensational competitors of NJPW’s Junior Heavyweight division. I wonder if Douki would have factored into the match had he not suffered his injury. Nonetheless, a great opener to tonight’s main card.

Katsuyori Shibata versus Hiroshi Tanahashi ended in a 5-minute Time Limit Draw

A lock-up, a chest-chop sequence. The more it went on, the more Tanahashi and Shibata furiously exchanged brutality. Shibata’s chest was red, but not as significantly as Tanahashi, as they traded blows that echoed through the Tokyo Dome.

Much like old friends partaking in a familiar game of chess, the communication of violence spoke more than words could. Whereas Shibata is a man re-entering a world he was forced to leave behind, Tanahashi readies to say goodbye to it. This reunion hit the notes they needed to hit and didn’t overstay its welcome.

Mercedes Moné defeated Mina Shirakawa for the Strong Women’s Championship and the Undisputed British Women’s Championship

Moné’s confidence shone while determination gleamed and sparkled within Shirakawa’s eyes. Moné dived to her opponent on the outside after she took a spill, but fell from the top rope a moment later after a Dragon Screw Leg Whip. Shirakawa worked the knees of Moné, but couldn’t avoid the Strong Women’s Champion’s Meteora.

Continuing targeting Moné’s week spot, Shirakawa trapped her in a leglock. Another Dragon Screw Leg Whip by Shirakawa keeps her in control, as she followed up with another leglock. Shirakawa tried a Venus Driver for a very close 2-count pin, with Moné’s Bank Statement reaching the same result. Frantically struggling to survive, Moné won with a Moné Maker.

Two incredibly talented superstars putting on an undeniable classic. Shirakawa’s flashy style coalesced wondrously with Moné’s big match style. Having went a year without wrestling due to her injury sustained at NJPW STRONG Resurgence 2023, seeing her adorned with belts in the Tokyo Dome as fans chant “CEO” after she’s gone feels so right.

David Finlay defeated Brody King

King’s domineering size, while not dwarfing Finlay, certainly overwhelmed him with brute strength. The cunning of Finlay served him well enough, but King moved unforgivingly, tossing Finlay every which way, even into the steel barricades. This wasn’t just a match to emerge victorious, this was a match for Finlay to survive. The overall welfare of the War Dog was in dire condition, helplessly enduring the abuses of King as Gedo pleaded on the outside.

Something awoke in Finlay, as he struck back, poked King in the eyes, and threw himself completely into his larger opponent towards the barricade—twice. And yet, despite all of this renewed rage inside of the Bullet Club Leader, Finlay only made a small chip in the armor of King. All he could do was kick out of subsequent pins. Eventually, the former Global Heavyweight Champion found it in himself to unleash Oblivion and Overkill to ultimately slay the giant.

Finlay is on a roll here. Absolutely impressive weekend of matches for him. This hero’s journey for one of NJPW’s top villains made for a compelling story. King’s dominance made this seem like a foregone conclusion, but the perseverance of Finlay changed the whole complexion of the match. King, as usual, was in strong form, feeling like a natural in a NJPW setting.

Shota Umino defeated Claudio Castagnoli

Halfway through Umino’s entrance, Castagnoli ambushed the Roughneck. His wrath was delivered unto Umino far into the outside of the arena, across steel and ground. Wrenching back Umino’s face, Castagnoli’s remorseless approach read more like a message than competition.

Castagnoli’s wealth of strength paid dividends, such as a spot where he casually tossed him from the top turnbuckle as though he were a lightweight teddy bear. When his signature Swing couldn’t disorientate Umino enough for the win, he pulled deep with a Boston Crab to no success. Seeking to toss him off the top rope again, Castagnoli fell victim to elbow strikes to the neck and a DDT from the top. A Ricola Bomb nearly gave Castagnoli the victory, but Umino survived and won with an Underhook Death Driver.

Storyline-wise, this felt like a baptism by fire to mold Umino into something new. If NJPW listens to the online fanbase and the boos Umino got at Wrestle Kingdom 19, this could lead somewhere interesting. Deconstruct the current visage of Umino and rebirth him anew. However, despite the poor performance last night, Umino’s teetering to an edge of playing to no one but himself; if he plays a lone wolf and does something interesting with it, there may be no need for renovation.

Konosuke Takeshita (c) defeated Tomohiro Ishii for the NEVER Openweight Championship and the AEW International Championship

Like rampaging beasts, Takeshita and Ishii tore into one another with the ferocity of apex predators on nature documentaries. For the most part, Takeshita’s stiff strikes kept Ishii at bay, despite his tenacity enduring. Through a stretch of back-and-forth intensity, Takeshita regained control courtesy a suplex and later a Blue Thunderbomb. A Falcon Arrow from the top rope crumpled Ishii, but could not elicit a pinfall.

The indominatable versus the impervious, neither man were able to incapacitate the other without taking themselves out first. Miraculously, the knackered Ishii countered the top rope aspirations of Takeshita into a Hurricanrana, following up with a series of headbutts and lariats. Takeshita managed a hard-fought comeback with elbows, but sealed the envelope to this match with a Raging Fire for the pinfall.

Takeshita truly shines in NJPW and the big matches in AEW. His transformative 2023 has elevated him in so many respects, as his in-ring is incredibly solid and can steal the show on any given night if given a chance to shine. The path to his collection of gold is proof enough of that.

The Young Bucks (Matthew Jackson & Nicholas Jackson) defeated United Empire (Great-O-Khan & Jeff Cobb) and Los Ingobernables de Japon (Tetsuya Naito and Hiromu Takahashi) for the vacant IWGP Tag Team Championship

United Empire and Los Ingobernables de Japon immediately took each other on, as the Young Bucks watched. The Jackson brothers then proceeded to venture towards their vintage teamwork while loudly bantering.

Khan and Naito locked up, with Cobb throwing his weight around but suffered a well-synced flip from the Bucks. United Empire staged a front that overwhelmed the competition, nearly suffering an EVP Trigger from the Bucks, but overcame both with a singular massive suplex. Briefly allying with LIJ, the Bucks betrayed them, thrashed Naito and Cobb, and then won the match with a Meltzer Driver onto a defeated Khan.

United Empire was eloquent in their heavy-hitting behemoth forms. The Young Bucks were a different story—they were in top form with in-ring psychology and athleticism. My only complaint with this is that I don’t think LIJ were necessarily needed in this bout.

Yota Tsuji defeated Jack Perry for the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship

Tsuji maintained neck control initially, halted by Perry’s leg work. The Scapegoat gave little room for the champion to breathe, as Perry threw everything he had at him. A Spanish Fly from Tsuji earned a brief reprieve, had it not been for Perry’s knee; this was a double-edged sword as the challenger began to favor his other knee.

Failing to stage another comeback, Tsuji fell victim to a low-blow by Perry but kicked out at the last second. Recovering just enough adrenaline, the champion dodged and weaved through any attack Perry could muster. Slowed by his knee, Perry collapsed under the force of a devastating Gene Blaster. Tsuji retained, standing tall over The Scapegoat.

Though not mind-blowing, Perry versus Tsuji was a blast, with the towering Tsuji fighting from underneath to thwart the malicious Perry.

Kenny Omega defeated Gabe Kidd

Kidd’s standard fare blazed like an inferno, hushed to an ember as Omega’s traditional style delivered skin-reddening strikes and familiar taunts. Kidd snatched the flow of the match and whipped Omega to the barricades repeatedly. Renovating the commentary area, Kidd’s plans were postponed thanks to Omega diving him into the barricades.

Kidd staged a coup against the experience of Omega on the apron, but was punished for it by spilling onto the floor and rammed mercilessly under a vicious sneer to the barricade and the tables Kidd set earlier. Bloodied, Kidd could only watch as Omega soared through the Tokyo sky past the barricade and onto him below. Having damaged his hip during the dive, Omega berated the ringside crew, leaving just enough time for Kidd to recover in a fury rendering him almost zombie-like.

With another table set up, Kidd dragged Omega’s crumpled corpse and dropped him through it with a cruel Powerbomb. Commentary declared that Omega was oozing blood while Kidd and his War Dogs threw a collection of steel chairs into the ring. Omega, sensing the danger, kneed Kidd onto the mountain of chairs but fell soundly to a Straight Vertical Suplex onto the chairs he so hoped to avoid. The pair dueled with chairs until Omega landed one directly onto Kidd’s head.

Omega opted for each of his signature moves, from Croyt’s Wrath to a V-Trigger, hoping to end it with a One-Winged Angel, which faltered due to Omega’s diverticulitis. Kidd countered this further with an Inoki hold to the crowd’s ovation. Kidd pummelled Omega with multiple Drivers but failed to get the job done. Mustering the strength to rise once more, Omega used Kota Ibushi’s Kamigoye and ended the match with a One-WInged Angel for the pinfall.

Of course this was a great match. This is Kenny Omega we’re talking about. But this was something transformative entirely. Look at Tanahashi crying post-match. Both men bloodied themselves to a pulp. Kidd came in great shape and left looking stronger in defeat while Omega remains one of the top wrestlers of our time. This was a more mature approach to his matches, even for NJPW standards, thus creating an experience unique to his match catalog, let alone wrestling as a whole.

Main Event

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Ricochet for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship

Before Sabre could even enter the ring, an impassioned Ricochet charged full velocity at the champion. Enraged, Sabre swung with uppercuts on the challenger, catching the bouncy Ricochet at every chance. The early offense has wore on Sabre, made worse by the unrelenting nature of Ricochet. The aerial wrestler’s style contrasted wildly to Sabre’s grounded approach.

Any moment Ricochet extended his limbs to Sabre in his strikes, he reacted quick enough to avoid any reversal by the champ. Sabre mounted a comeback, throwing kicks and strikes like his life depended on it. However, Ricochet caught him and suplexed him consecutively from the middle of the ring to the padding outside. Sabre re-entered the ring, barely beating the count and engaged in a slap-fest with Ricochet.

Sabre powered through with a series of uppercuts, trounced soundly by Ricochet’s knee. At last countering Ricochet, the champ plunged Ricochet with a Sabre Driver, transitioned into a Cross Armbreaker. Ricochet floated in a Shooting Star Press for a heart-stopping 2-count. Sabre grounded Ricochet and defeated him with a Jim Breaks Armbar to a vocal submission.

There was absolutely no following Omega vs Kidd, but a solid effort was made by Sabre and Ricochet. The latter made me believe he could shock the wrestling world with a win, and has been leaps and bounds above where he was in WWE. Still, this cemented to me that last night’s poor performance was a fluke and that Sabre remains worthy of his belt. Long may the mighty not kneel.

Overall, Wrestle Dynasty was a great first showing at what this conglomeration of companies could do. Match quality differed throughout the night, but ultimately there was not a bad match on the card. Everyone delivered. One thing I must note, however: If you’re NJPW and you have Kenny Omega on your card, you put him in the main event, unless you’ve positioned people who are actually on his level to fill that slot. It applied to Wrestle Kingdom 17, and it applies here too.

Big Audio Nightmare: Tokyo Dome weekend preview, the latest in NOAH, Stardom & AJPW

The Big Audio Nightmare is back as myself and Mike Sempervive talk about everything happening in the very busy world of Japanese wrestling.

This week’s topics include:

  • OZAWA’s star making GHC Championship victory and performance
  • Shinsuke Nakamura’s return to NOAH
  • Stardom’s triumphant Dream Queendom show
  • Starlight Kid finally wins the big one
  • AJPW Year End show hits and misses
  • In-depth previews of NJPW Wrestle Kingdom and Wrestle Dynasty
  • Much more!

Click here to listen (sub needed)

AEW International title defenses official for NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 19, Wrestle Dynasty

Following his victory at Worlds End, Konosuke Takeshita is officially set to defend the AEW International Championship at the Tokyo Dome.

Takeshita is challenging Shingo Takagi for the NEVER Openweight Championship at NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 19 on January 4. When the bout was announced, it was noted that it would become a double title match if Takeshita was still AEW International Champion. That is now official with Takeshita having no more title defenses remaining before Wrestle Kingdom. He successfully defended the belt by defeating Powerhouse Hobbs at Worlds End this past weekend.

The winner of Takeshita vs. Takagi will defend both the NEVER Openweight Championship and AEW International Championship against Tomohiro Ishii in another double title match at Wrestle Dynasty on January 5. Both shows are being held at the Tokyo Dome and will air live on NJPW World.

NJPW wrote:

  • After a successful defense Saturday at the Worlds End event against Powerhouse Will Hobbs, Konosuke Takeshita will defend the AEW International Championship against Shingo Takagi’s NEVER title in a title for title match at Wrestle Kingdom.
  • Not only that, but the next night at Wrestle Dynasty, Tomohiro Ishii will challenge for both championships. Who will emerge with all the gold?

Takeshita became AEW International Champion by defeating Will Ospreay and Ricochet in a three-way match at AEW’s WrestleDream pay-per-view this October.

NJPW reveals full card for Wrestle Dynasty

The full card for Wrestle Dynasty has been confirmed.

NJPW revealed the full card for the show that takes place one day after Wrestle Kingdom 19, January 5 at the Tokyo Dome. Included is a match for the ROH Tag Team titles that will be part of the kickoff event. Current champions Dustin Rhodes and Sammy Guevara will defend against Yoshinobu Kanemaru and SHO. The latter two cut a video during ROH Final Battle this past Friday challenging Rhodes & Guevara for the titles.

The second kickoff match will be for the International Women’s Cup. Persephone, Momo Watanabe, Willow Nightingale, and Athena will meet where the winner will earn a future title match of their choice.

Other top matches on the card will see Kenny Omega make his return to in-ring action against Gabe Kidd, Zack Sabre Jr. take on Ricochet, and Shota Umino facing Claudio Castagnoli.

Here is the updated lineup for Wrestle Dynasty. Match order has yet to be determined:

  • Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet
  • Shota Umino vs. Claudio Castagnoli
  • David Finlay vs. Brody King
  • Yota Tsuji vs. Jack Perry
  • NEVER Championship: Either Shingo Takagi or Konosuke Takeshita defends against Tomohiro Ishii. Will be a double title match if Takeshita remains AEW International Champion on January 4
  • IWGP Tag Team titles: Great-O-Khan & a mystery partner vs. The Young Bucks
  • NJPW Strong Women’s & RPW Undisputed Women’s British double title match: Mercedes Mone vs. Mina Shirakawa
  • Lucha gauntlet match featuring CMLL and NJPW talent
  • Kickoff match for ROH Tag Team titles: Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara defend against Yoshinobu Kanemaru & SHO
  • Kickoff match for the Women’s International Cup: Persephone (CMLL) Vs. Momo Watanabe (Stardom) vs. Willow Nightingale (NJPW) vs. Athena (ROH)

House of Torture to challenge for ROH Tag Team titles at Wrestle Dynasty

House of Torture have issued a challenge to the ROH Tag Team Champions for Wrestle Dynasty on January 5 in the Tokyo Dome.

After Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara successfully retained their titles in a bullrope match at Friday’s ROH Final Battle, a video message from Bullet Club House of Torture’s SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru played with the duo challenging Rhodes & Guevara for Wrestle Dynasty:

Rhodes & Guevara responded to the challenge in a segment posted to social media:

Once finalized, the ROH Tag title bout will be the eleventh set for Wrestle Dynasty on January 5. The updated lineup:

Wrestle Dynasty (Sunday, January 5 airing live on NJPW World) —

  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Sabre retains against Shota Umino at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Shota Umino vs. Claudio Castagnoli (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Umino wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Mercedes Mone vs. RevPro Undisputed British Women’s Champion Mina Shirakawa in a double title match
  • David Finlay vs. Brody King (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Finlay retains against Yota Tsuji at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Yota Tsuji vs. Jack Perry (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Tsuji wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Great-O-Khan & TBD vs. The Young Bucks for the vacant IWGP Tag Team titles
  • International Women’s Cup four-way match (winner receives a title shot in the promotion of their choosing): Persephone vs. Athena vs. Willow Nightingale vs. TBD (Stardom representative)
  • Tomohiro Ishii challenges either Shingo Takagi or Konosuke Takeshita for the NEVER Openweight Championship (AEW International Championship will also be on the line if Takeshita still holds the title when he faces Takagi at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Lucha Gauntlet match featuring four wrestlers from CMLL and four from NJPW
  • ROH Tag Team Champions Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara defend against SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru

Mercedes Mone ‘so happy’ she gets to accomplish Tokyo Dome dream

Mercedes Mone is just a couple weeks away from accomplishing one of her biggest goals in pro wrestling.

On Sunday night, Mone retained her NJPW Strong Women’s Championship against Hazuki in the main event of Strong Style Evolved. It was then revealed that Mone will face Mina Shirakawa in a potential double title match at Wrestle Dynasty. If Shirakawa still holds the Revolution Pro Wrestling Undisputed British Women’s Championship, that title will be on the line in addition to Mone’s NJPW Strong belt.

Wrestle Dynasty is being held at the Tokyo Dome on January 5. During an Instagram live session last night, Mone got emotional when discussing how much wrestling at the Tokyo Dome means to her. Mone said she’s so happy that she gets to accomplish this dream against Shirakawa.

“One of my biggest goals, my biggest dreams, I get to perform — I get to wrestle at the Tokyo Dome [on] January 5,” Mone said before tearing up. “I’m so frickin’ happy. I’m literally just so happy, oh my gosh. It’s so cool. It’s so cool that I still get to chase my dreams and accomplish dreams. I’m so happy.

“And I’m legit so happy it’s against Mina, who when I first went to Japan in like 2018, Hayashi-san — the guy who makes Rey Mysterio’s gear — contacted me and said, ‘Hey, I want you to meet Mina. She speaks pretty good English and she will show you around Japan.’ And I remember she messaged me, and she was just so sweet and showed me around Japan and took me to so many cool places. And now we get to wrestle each other in the new year. Man, I can’t believe the new year is like two weeks away, two and a half weeks away. And I did so much this year, and I’m so thankful. I cannot believe everything that’s happened to me within all these years.”

The Tokyo Dome is where the former Sasha Banks made her first NJPW appearance in 2023, but this will be her first time wrestling at the venue.

Mone — who also currently holds the AEW TBS title — has a chance to become a triple champion if she defeats Shirakawa at Wrestle Dynasty.

Wrestle Kingdom 19 and Wrestle Dynasty are taking place from the Tokyo Dome on back-to-back days. The latter event will feature wrestlers from NJPW, AEW, Stardom, CMLL, and ROH. Shirakawa competes for both AEW and Stardom.

Shirakawa posted on social media that getting to face Mone is also a dream for her.

Lucha Gauntlet match added to Wrestle Dynasty

A new match has been confirmed for Wrestle Dynasty.

An eight-person gauntlet match featuring four wrestlers from CMLL and four from NJPW has been added to the January 5, 2025, card in the Tokyo Dome. Participants will enter the match at one-minute intervals, with the first person to gain a pinfall being declared the winner.

From NJPW1972.com:

“Also set for Wrestle Dynasty is a special NJPW vs CMLL lucha gauntlet match. In this matchup, up to eight participants, four from New Japan and four from CMLL, will enter the ring at one minute intervals, and the first pinfall will end the bout. Who will be in this dramatic and high speed encounter?”

Wrestle Dynasty (Sunday, January 5 airing live on NJPW World) —

  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Sabre retains against Shota Umino at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Shota Umino vs. Claudio Castagnoli (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Umino wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Mercedes Mone vs. RevPro Undisputed British Women’s Champion Mina Shirakawa in a double title match
  • David Finlay vs. Brody King (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Finlay retains against Yota Tsuji at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Yota Tsuji vs. Jack Perry (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Tsuji wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Great-O-Khan & TBD vs. The Young Bucks for the vacant IWGP Tag Team titles
  • International Women’s Cup four-way match (winner receives a title shot in the promotion of their choosing): Persephone vs. Athena vs. Willow Nightingale or Jamie Hayter vs. TBD (Stardom representative)
  • Tomohiro Ishii challenges either Shingo Takagi or Konosuke Takeshita for the NEVER Openweight Championship (AEW International Championship will also be on the line if Takeshita still holds the title when he faces Takagi at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Lucha Gauntlet match featuring four wrestlers from CMLL and four from NJPW

Willow Nightingale qualifies for International Women’s Cup, Julia Hart returns on AEW Collision

AEW Collision: Winter is Coming kicked off with a bang on Saturday night.

The December 14 episode of Collision started off with a qualifying match for the upcoming International Women’s Cup Tournament at NJPW x AEW Wrestle Dynasty 2025. Following a hard-hitting two-break bout between Willow Nightingale and Jamie Hayter, it was the former who picked up the win. With the victory, Nightingale has qualified as the AEW representative in the aforementioned women’s tourney, which features talents representing AEW, ROH, CMLL and STARDOM.

Other competitors confirmed for the tourney include CMLL representative Persephone and ROH representative Athena. The STARDOM representative will be determined by a two-night tournament scheduled for December 21 and December 22.

After the Nightingale-Hayter tourney qualifier bout wrapped up, the lights in the bout went out and the long-awaited return of Julia Hart took place. The House of Black member hit the ring and attacked Hayter. Hart had been interrupting Hayter’s backstage interviews segments for the past couple of weeks to promote her highly-anticipated AEW comeback.

NJPW x AEW Wrestle Dynasty 2025 is scheduled for January 5 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan, featuring the following advertised lineup:

NJPW x AEW Wrestle Dynasty 2025 (Sunday, January 5, airing live on NJPW World)

  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ricochet (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Sabre retains against Shota Umino at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Shota Umino vs. Claudio Castagnoli (will be an IWGP World Heavyweight Championship match if Umino wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • David Finlay vs. Brody King (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Finlay retains against Yota Tsuji at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Yota Tsuji vs. Jack Perry (will be an IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship match if Tsuji wins the title at Wrestle Kingdom)
  • Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd
  • Great-O-Khan & TBD vs. The Young Bucks for the vacant IWGP Tag Team titles
  • International Women’s Cup four-way match (winner receives a title shot in the promotion of their choosing): Persephone vs. Athena vs. Willow Nightingale or Jamie Hayter vs. TBD (Stardom representative)
  • Tomohiro Ishii challenges either Shingo Takagi or Konosuke Takeshita for the NEVER Openweight Championship (AEW International Championship will also be on the line if Takeshita still holds the title when he faces Takagi at Wrestle Kingdom)