Kenny Omega addresses his future & WWE rumors

Kenny Omega would’ve been the talk of the pro wrestling world after his instant classic against Kazuchika Okada at the Tokyo Dome regardless of what he did going forward.

But following two tweets where he claimed to be “stepping away from Japan” to reassess his future, speculation over what’s next for Omega has only increased since the immediate fallout of the Wrestle Kingdom 11 main event.

That speculation grew when John Cena posted a picture of Omega on his Instagram account yesterday. And Cena again seemed to mention Omega on that platform today, while also following him on Twitter.

Omega further elaborated on his future in interviews with Sports Illustrated’s Justin Barrasso and Tokyo Sports (thanks to a translation from Chris Charlton). In the SI interview, Omega addressed what’s next for him in wrestling.

“I’m leaving to consider my future options,” Omega said. “Returning so quickly after a huge loss would be unwise. I’m finding my next plan of attack in wrestling rather than blindly rushing forward just to be in a ring.”

Omega also seemed to share a mutual admiration with Cena.

“John Cena is one of the great WWE talents that I respect most,” said Omega. “If I were to end up there, working with someone of his caliber would certainly be a goal and jive with my mission of changing wrestling. I’m glad to be on his radar, but I haven’t made any decisions regarding my future yet.”

While closing the interview, Omega claimed that he hasn’t yet signed a new contract with any promotion.

“I fear that everyone has taken my words too literally,” Omega said. “Yes, I’m out of the country and off of shows, but I haven’t signed any new contracts yet. After such a huge loss, I didn’t want to just hang around and take part in meaningless matches. I’m only interested in changing the business, so I’m thinking carefully about what’s next.”

No matter what’s to come for Omega, all of his comments have seemed to be layered in kayfabe. That was true for the Tokyo Sports interview as well, where Omega noted that he has to rethink things after his Dome loss and said that he would be taking time off from NJPW.

Dave Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez discussed Omega’s situation on Sunday night’s edition of Wrestling Observer Radio. Meltzer said that he’s been told by a number of people that Omega is under contract with NJPW and would be returning to the company in March, but didn’t think Cena’s social media antics were done without purpose.

If Omega hasn’t renewed with NJPW, his original deal with the company had been set to expire at the end of this month.

NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 11 fan feedback: The best match ever?

Thumbs Up

  • Best match: Omega vs. Okada in a walk, but Takahashi vs. KUSHIDA and Tanahashi vs. Naito were both amazing, and any other night would be there.
  • Worst match: there wasn’t one, really.

Everything about the show was GREAT in my opinion, except who won the last two matches. I have no complaints otherwise, than to say they made some bad angle choices all over the place. Cody was fine over there, so that’s a good thing in his first night. I was absolutely blown away by Takahashi vs. KUSHIDA, and I already expected big things.Takahashi came across like a big, important star to me in this match. It was so so great, and honestly, I wanted to watch it again immediately after it was over.

The tag matches are what you expect from NJPW in that regard, and I didn’t think they put enough emphasis on Ospreay but honestly, every other choice (until the last two matches) were either exactly what I wanted or what I thought should happen. I was very glad Goto got the win after the year he’d had, LIJ had a banner year, and them with the NEVER belts could be really interesting, I’m always in favor of Ishii getting anything, and like I said Takahashi felt like a real star here to me.

The last two matches were off the charts incredible, to the point that I’ll be stopping people for like a year to ask them if they’ve seen them yet. Tanahashi vs. Naito was so smart and perfect in the way they built off everything and used everything so well. I thought it was incredible. Omega vs. Okada more than lived up to the hype we all had for it, in my view. They probably had the match of the year already, honestly, and for a lot of people it might be more than that. It’s a match I think I’ll wind up rewatching over and over and over again. I’ll probably see it at least 20 times before the year is over.

I hated that Tanahashi and Omega lost, though. Those are the only complaints I can muster about this show, but they are complaints. I feel like NJPW spent a lot of energy and effort telling us this was Tanahashi’s restart, his time to come back and be the ace he’d fallen away from, and instead he loses immediately. It kind of feels like the Cena credibility problem in the fact that it used to be a big thing to beat Tanahashi, but now so many have done it, I don’t know what it really does for someone. Maybe he needs time to recover or rest or whatever, and I guess they wanted LIJ to all have belts, but it just felt like a mistake to take the guy who’s been the cornerstone, and should still be a big deal, and have him lose on that stage.

Omega, I’m sure, will get a win fairly soon, and probably the belt, based of this show. But man, this is the first time I’ve really thought Gedo made a large mistake in his booking. This show, especially, was one that a lot of people outside the typical NJPW sphere paid attention to, and while I’m sure Kenny will probably win the belt fairly soon (good Lord willing), it comes across as not being as important because it wasn’t at a major show.

On top of that, the Bullet Club lost every match, except Cody’s debut, so it makes them seem weak. They made sure there was basically no interference in the Omega match, too. Had Omega won, I would have understood that. But, obviously, he didn’t. Now, New Year’s Dash may completely change things, but this is one of those moments where NJPW feels like WWE in the sense that the guy who needs the win will get it on the show after the biggest one of the year so everyone doesn’t see him win it.

Omega is obviously a star at this point, and there’s no disputing that, or how they’ve built him this past year, but it just seems like a poor choice to keep the belt on Okada, who doesn’t seem like he gains anything from it instead of solidifying someone who we all know could have excellent, fresh main event match ups with anyone on the roster (Ishii, Elgin, Tanahashi, Shibata, and so on.) Maybe I’ve got too much of a Western understanding of the idea here, or maybe I’m too lost in the WWE woods to understand the idea, but for a show that’s last half was spectacular and almost perfect, I can’t help but feeling those last two decisions were mistakes.

I guess it doesn’t change too much, though, because I’m going to wind up watching regardless. And I’m probably going to wind up watching that Okada vs. Omega match again before the day is over.

– Jonathan Beckner

**********

Thumbs up

  • Best bout: Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • Worst bout: New Japan Rumble

Less than halfway into the main event, I found myself thinking “this is the most complete match I’ve ever seen.” I’ve seen plenty of longer matches that felt like they told such a less compelling story, and thousands of shorter matches that had so much less energy. It has to be the best match I’ve ever seen, but I don’t know if I’ll ever feel like watching it again. Not because I’m a diehard Omega fan, though I am, but because this result made a dream that I’ve had running through my head for a while now seem essentially impossible.

For the last few months, I’ve had the urge to pursue a career in wrestling. I’ve spent the better part of the last decade writing and playing music (since I was 14, I’ll be 23 in a few weeks), and I was sure that I would dedicate my life to that pursuit, but wrestling just hit me. The idea of putting something I’m really good at on the back burner and trying something I might never be able to succeed in was, and is, scary, but that urge just won’t go away. I’ve been getting in better shape, working on promos, and trying to learn Japanese. My mind’s entirely wrapped up in this world.

I know the point of working in the wrestling business — and any business, for that matter — is supposed to be making money, but that just doesn’t drive me at all. Legacy and self-expression are the only things I really care about, and particularly building a legacy with what I see as the premier wrestling company in the world, New Japan Pro Wrestling. The ultimate end goal for me would be main eventing the 1/4 show, and winning the IWGP title. And not just because of the historical significance of both the show and the belt, but because of the implications of a westerner being given that validation.

I, like Omega, have had an affinity for Japanese culture since I was a kid, and to be embraced by that culture would mean a great deal to me. Now, I’ve known for a while that it’s more insular and nationalistic than would be ideal, but I’ve never really felt like an outsider couldn’t reach the top of the mountain, if the circumstances were right.

And I’m getting the feeling that that was false hope. Omega’s fluent in Japanese, he’s engrossed himself in the culture, he has the most global appeal of anyone in the company, and there’s no one in the world who can outwork him. And I’m sure he’ll win the title at some point, and main event a few smaller shows, but I don’t get the feeling they’ll ever really give him that crowning moment. I get the sense there’s a ceiling, and if you’re not Japanese (or perhaps Brock Lesnar, which I’m certainly not), you can never be the guy. A guy, but even if you’re the most compelling talent in the business, there’s a ceiling. And I just don’t know if I could handle spending years working towards a goal that I could never achieve.

This show was great. Shibata/Goto and Tanahashi/Naito were excellent, and the main event was profoundly incredible. But I had a lot less hope when it was over than I did when it began, and I’m not really sure what to think at this point. I’ll be watching New Year’s Dash when it comes on in a few hours, but NJPW has lost some of the luster to me. I know all of this might sound naive, because I’m looking at things through very idealistic eyes, but this is just what I took away from WK11.

– Tyler Shillman

**********

Gigantic Thumbs Up

Worst Match: New Japan Rumble *1/4

An almighty cluster of a match with a lot of awkward moments, some of the old fellas looked terrible, but had some decent moments and the closing stretch between Cheeseburger and Elgin was good.

Tiger Mask W vs. Tiger The Dark ***1/4

Did some nice stuff, but didn’t get a great deal of time, seemingly, and didn’t reach the heights it could’ve. Nice gentle main card opener, relatively speaking, which is what it was supposed to be.

Barretta & Romero vs. Young Bucks ***3/4

Really good match. Worked with the big building in mind, built well, loved the spot where Romero missed his trademark clothesline numerous times then hit it, Barretta somersault bump to the outside was nuts, lots of nice stuff towards the end, really liked it.

Trios Title Gauntlet Match ***1/4

Disappointed Ospreay’s time was limited, match was rushed and a bit of a cluster, but was decent. Hot Potato Tag Titles continue to change hands.

Robinson vs. Cody ***1/2

Really liked it. Nice solid match while nothing overly adventurous. Loved Cody’s heel mannerisms and Robinson’s fire and selling.  

Cole vs. O’ Reilly ***1/2

Thought there was some good action, but place was as dead as a door-nail and that really hurt it.

Tag Title Three Way ***1/2

Good match, really picked-up towards the end, Ishii & Yano are quite the odd pairing. 

Takahashi vs. KUSHIDA ****1/4

Great match. First time watching Takahashi wrestle — very impressed. KUSHIDA’s always great. Well-paced despite being fast or hurried at times, let it breathe, good emphasis, lots of spectacular back-and-forth action. Sunset flip powerbomb to the outside is as nutty a transition move into the heat as you’ll see, senton splash dive was equally as nuts, KUSHIDA’s relentless pursuit of the Kimura was great. Super stuff.  

Goto vs. Shibata ****1/4

Their matches aren’t always entirely my cup of tea – as lots of striking sequences and displays of the Japanese fighting spirit aren’t really my thing, but I loved this one. Plenty of heavy selling, lots of double-downs, superb emphasis, lots of drama, spot where Goto lit him up with kicks then Shibata dropped him with a single forearm was great, as was the sleeper spot where Goto reached for the rope then Shibata trapped the arm — great match. Little disappointed and surprised Shibata lost the title so soon after regaining it.   

Tanahashi vs. Naito ****1/2

Adored this match. Didn’t do as much as you see in a lot of New Japan main event level matches, but the pacing and rhythm was fantastic, emphasis applied was great, dragged considerable drama out of what they did, loved the two submission false finishes, loved the stand-&-trade kicks to the knees spot. Wonderful match. Despite not physically being what he was, mentally Tanahashi is amazing.

Best Match: Omega vs. Okada ***** 

For a long time I didn’t think it was going to match Tanahashi-Naito — at least in my mind. I thought the layout was really good, but even after the moonsault over the barricade and double stomp on the table, it didn’t seem to be flowing quite as well as it could, and was just lacking that spark to take it to the next level. After the back drop through the table I thought it was there, although it quickly faded. But once Okada hit the dropkick they just took it to a crazy level. 

Final stretch was incredible, a few minutes after the first Rainmaker I thought they’d gone too long and the match was past its peak, then after the second they took it even higher. Just insane match. Favourite spot had to be Omega kicking to try and free himself from the attempt Rainmaker to no avail. Was horrified by the top rope dragon suplex, though. Don’t ever want to see that again. Plus missile dropkick to the back of the head was nasty. Incredible action, great drama, great emphasis — one of the best matches I’ve seen.     

– Tom Griffiths

**********

I was lucky enough to be at the Dome tonight. People were swearing it was the greatest thing they had ever seen. I was in a curry house afterwards and people were shaking their heads as if to say to themselves “wow.”

I don’t want to take anything away from Okada as his athleticism and timing remain unmatched, but that was an astonishing one man show from Kenny Omega. Having just watched the match back on Asahi, I’m even more convinced. I’m talking an all time great performance. 

Common sense told me being WK it wasn’t Kenny’s time yet but he came out a bigger star than he went in and they protected his finish. Absolutely a 5* match, live and even more so watching back on TV. You could spend all day listing the spots, callbacks, teases and general brilliance. I’d say there’s not been a match like that since Punk v Cena at MITB.

Although the atmosphere in the dome was actually pretty damned good, even in the nose bleeds, it undoubtedly detracts regardless of how good the matches are. That said, it was a terrific show, solid to the top half and taking off from there, WK style. Both semi-mains were at least 4 1/2*, maybe higher, Tanahashi v Naito being another masterpiece from two true story tellers.

– Martin Cox

**********

I enjoyed the PPV very much, though the middle part of it sucked my energy.

I love 4/6 of the guys in the heavyweight tag match but that match wasn’t necessary. Cody vs Juice wasn’t bad but it shouldn’t have been on the show but it was a good bathroom break match. I want more for Kota Ibushi but he has to choose to get that.

I really don’t know how many more years in a row NJPW can keep up the insane high quality in the final matches of Wrestle Kingdom. But I’m gonna enjoy the run.

  • Worst match: Cody vs. Juice
  • Best match: Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada

– Trevor Dixon

**********

Wow what a show, those last four matches were all main event caliber all over the world and it just got better and better after each one. Three arguable five star matches topped off by maybe the best match I’ve ever seen. I give it about 20 thumbs up.

  • Best Bout: Okada/Omega
  • Worst Bout: Cody/Juice

– Todd Parker

**********

Newer NJPW fan, first live WK show, watched via NJPW World.

I’d like to start by raving about the guys that I hadn’t watched much, if anything, of before last night.  Hiromu Takahashi impressed the hell out of me, and part of that was that he looked like he belonged in that big fight atmosphere.  Rocky Romero looked like a million dollars and managed to get me invested in a running angle with Beretta that I knew literally nothing about based one this one match.  The Guerrillas of Destiny and Shibata looked like beasts.

Match of the night was Okada/Omega. Omega’s transformation to a top guy is complete. Hard hitting spots, moments of pure tension, and a crowd that was masterfully worked into a frenzy. A great story was started here, and I can not wait to see these two men have another war down the line.

The difference in my opinion between this and the previous match was that I felt that the conclusion of the Naito/Tanahashi match was never really in doubt.  Theirs was a story reaching the conclusion. The latter match felt it could go either way until the very end, and was able to hook me in emotionally such that by the end, I was almost ready to weep.  

That being said, Naito was the MVP last night.  It was clear early on that one of the stories of this show as a whole was Los Ingobernables de Japon’s domination. They dominated on every match they were in. Naito slammed shut the book of his history with Tanahashi, and as amazing as Omega’s ascension has been Naito’s future looks even brighter. It was obvious who the people came out to see at Tokyo Dome, and he deserves the credit for it.

Great show, one of my favorites ever.  NJPW set out to hook in more consumers like me, and they absolutely nailed it with this show. I can’t wait to come out for NJPW when they come to CA this summer. 

– RJ Zavala

**********

Really I’d give the entire show a major thumbs up. It was well worth staying up all night for and I just finished watching it again.

Cody’s debut was great, of course Naito/Tana was fantastic. Not sure I liked seeing the entire Bullet Club go down, though. Especially the YB.

The main event of course was beyond extraordinary. Very much admired the fact they protected Omega’s finisher, despite the various counters and setups.

My one nitpick is I would’ve loved to have seen a similar setup that we saw in the G1 final where he used prior Bullet Club member’s finishers en route to executing his own. That was brilliant storytelling and I think that would’ve the icing on the cake, even if he never did execute the OWA.

– Alex Soto

**********

Thumbs Up

  • MOTN: Tanahashi vs. Naito
  • Worst: Young Bucks vs. Beretta & Romero

Made it till 6 a.m. last night, and watched the final two matches this afternoon after avoiding any spoilers and not going on the site or Twitter. I watched the undercard in English commentary so I could follow along better and stay awake easier, and then the last two matches (this afternoon) with the Japanese as I don’t think anything matches the Japanese commentary when the main events go into those final 10 minutes of near fall spots. Really love having the option of both though to switch back and forth or rewatch with the other commentary. 

MOTN for me was Tanahashi vs. Naito because of the overall pace and psychology of both guys working over each other’s knee, but the last 10-15 minutes of Omega vs. Okada from around that dragon suplex off the top rope was absolutely incredible. 

Loved the KUSHIDA vs. Takahashi match and Shibata vs. Goto match as well. You could really feel the crowd come alive once the NEVER match came on. That’s what felt like was missing on the undercard, one of those Makabe vs. Ishii type matches to get things going.

The last four matches on the show were all awesome, undercard and most of the American vs. American matches were pretty forgettable. The G.O.D tag match was hilarious just for all the swearing and Corino cracking up at Tama Tonga going on a rant throughout the whole match. Cody vs. Robinson was decent, but mainly forgettable. Still glad to see Cody get a chance as this character though instead of the stupid Stardust gimmick. Cole vs. O’Reilly was a bit disappointing too. Japanese crowds just never seem into the “gaijin vs. gaijin” matches, feels like when you send cruisers out on Raw. 

Thought the Young Bucks match was terrible, was the worst match of the night for me given that they were given a single tag match slot and could have put on a great match. Was glad we didn’t get an eight-man tag for once to start the show, but the psychology of the match right from the start with a countout tease after their first offensive move of the match (I know “psychology” + “YB” don’t go together) was “minus five stars” and the match just had absolutely no flow or pace except for going through the motions of double team spots, you could barely call it a “tag” match as all four guys would just be in there at any given time. It made ECW seem like they had stringent  rules in comparison.

Definitely big thumbs up for the last four matches, just wish they’d had another good strong style match a bit earlier in the card to even things out. Looking forward to the review later. 

– Tim Dudley

**********

Thumbs up

Best match: KUSHIDA vs. Hiromu Takahashi
Worst match: Juice Robinson vs. Cody

I thought this was a really good card! The first half was what I expected it to be. Good wrestling but none of the matches really blew me away. I think things really picked up at the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship bout. I really enjoyed Wrestle Kingdom and I thought it was worth staying up for.

– Joshua Hadley

**********

Thumbs way, way up

Best match was Tanahashi/ Naito for me — beautiful storytelling and gorgeous wrestling that kept the crowd hot from start to finish and had some really clever callbacks to their previous matches. Some of the best, most consistent storytelling I’ve seen in wrestling.

Okada/Omega was great but took too long to build up — the first 10 or so minutes were very forgettable and, as I fear may be the case with a lot of Okada matches, things only really started to hot up in the last 15 minutes or so. That being said, it was still incredible to watch and had some crazy spots.

I would probably go IC match > NEVER > Heavyweight > Jr. Heavyweight, with all four being 4.5 stars or above

Worst match was probably Cody/ Juice. Juice tried his hardest, but Cody is completely unremarkable.

– Jack Tainsh

**********

Obviously the thoughts will be flooding in giving Omega/Okada ****** and the such and giving this whole show thumbs up for it’s performance and booking,

But I just want throw down my opinion of the three corner tag for the heavyweight tag championships, what an amazing character showcase it was, everyone got some of their stuff in, and it turned into one of the most un-comedy wrestling comedy matches of the card with the overkill of profanity by all members of the cast!

And also props to Yano and Ishii’s character dynamic, the Stone Pitbull appears to only be there to clothesline some heads and doesn’t care much for the titles, while Yano’s pretty chuffed with himself to have so much gold.

– Sean Ellis

**********

Thumbs WAY Up!

  • Best Match: Tanahashi vs. Naito
  • Worst Match: None. New Japan Rumble was slow and gimmicky but still fun stuff. I mean, where the hell else are you going to see Billy Gunn, Elgin, Liger, Tenzan, Nagata, Scott Norton and Kobayashi….in 2017 nonetheless!!!!

Really enjoyed every match on the show, last four were all excellent. 

Only minor bugaboo was that the Cody/Juice match worked the the leg/knee too much, given how Naito/Tanahashi played out and the match they were telling. So it felt as though they might have diluted the story a tad and was easily preventable given that it was basically a showcase match for Cody.

– Jeff Parker

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Omega/Okada
  • Worst Match: If you’re counting the trios gauntlet as separate matches, then Yujiro/Page/Fale vs. Los Ingobernables. If the trios gauntlet all counts as one big match, then Tiger Mask W vs. Tiger the Dark.

I watched this live, so tiredness probably factored into the undercard feeling so saggy to me, but the last four matches definitely made up for it. I had the Jr. Hvy title match at ****, the NEVER and IC matches at ****1/2, and the main event at *****.

I’m not sure how my feelings on the main event will change when I give it some space and then watch it again. I definitely think the match was lopsided, with the first 15 or 20 minutes just being an extended warm-up for the really crazy stuff. But the really crazy stuff was SO crazy that it blew me away even more than I thought these guys were capable of. If I had to compare the feeling of that last half of Omega/Okada to anything, it’d be the PWG BOLA ’16 Night 2 trios match, or the Dudleys/Hardys/E&C TLC match — matches where they burrow into a style and push right through it into overload territory, to the point where it cycles back around from “too much” into great again.

– Patrick Tobin

**********

Thumbs UP

  • Best Match: Okada vs Omega
  • Worst Match: NEVER Trios Gauntlet Match

There was nothing really “bad” on the show. It took a while for the crowd to get into the show though, probably because of all of the foreign wrestlers on the undercard. The four top matches had something for everyone as far as wrestling style goes. The Jr & NEVER title matches were very good, and easily could have been match of the night on any other card.

But it is so hard to choose between Naito/Tanahashi and Okada/Omega for match of the night. I had to give it to Okada/Omega because I was more invested in that match, but the IC Title match was also amazing. Depending on your view of wrestling, you can pick either one and still be right. Omega set out to have the best match he could have at the dome, and I think he succeeded. I believe that at some point this year, he will have that Heavyweight title. He’s ready, and the fans are ready as well.

– John Mannix

**********

This is without question the best show that I have ever watched live. To be fair, I only got into the NJPW stuff last year, and my word is it the best wrestling I’ve ever seen.Thumbs are so far up that they are in the clouds right now.

Anyway, the show. 

New Japan Rambo/Rumble (no idea which one it’s called)

Fun way to open the show, happy that Big Mike is back, glad that he won. Thumbs up.

Tiger Mask W vs. Tiger the Dark.

Was six minutes long with no heat whatsoever from the crowd, fun spot fest, but wasn’t particularly into it. Thumbs middle.

Bucks vs. Roppongi

Really great match, great story, didn’t expect the happy ending. Thumbs up.

6 Man Gauntlet match

Not quite the cluster I was expecting it to be, still great fun. Opening between CHAOS and the Bullet Club was real good, considering there was the some total of two guys there that I like (Ospreay and YOSHI-HASHI). Disappointed that there was no face off between Ospreay and Ricochet considering as, well, we all wanted to see it. Vader probably felt a longing for it too. 

CHAOS eliminated first, a pity, Jado didn’t even get to Flair flop. BC gone soon after, setting up a terrific finish between LIJ, and reigning champs Ricochet, Kojima and Finlay. 

Pleased that SANADA got a belt. I’m absolutely on the bandwagon of “Yes, that guy is a superstar in the making.” Thumbs up.

Cody vs Juice.

Bathroom break match. Okay, couple of good spots, Cody worked hard for heat. Thumbs middle.

ROH Title match

Good match, not much time to work, honestly expected more heat from the crowd, considering Kyle has worked in NJPW for a long time and Cole got himself over pretty quickly after his debut. 

Cole won, everyone  knows what that means. Thumbs middle.

Tag Team Titles

Missed most of this match owing to stream issues. Caught last five minutes. 

Seemed good, was surprised that I was one of the only people I know who picked Yano/Ishii to win, especially considering Yano’s Dome record. Thumbs middle, will watch full match on Friday.

KUSHIDA vs. Hiromu Takahashi.

Fantastic match. Almost any other show and this would be match of the night. Almost any other promotion and this would be their MOTY. 

Was slightly surprised to see Hiromu win, expected KUSHIDA to win, Hiromu to take BOSJ and then the title. I love it whenever KUSHIDA pulls out the armbar counter from a dive, it’s such a cool spot. Thumbs way, way up.

Shibata vs. Goto.

Stiff as heck. Paves way for Shibata to win the New Japan Cup. YAY! Thumbs way up.

Tanahashi vs. Naito for the IC belt.

I don’t know why I expected anything less from Tanahashi. I thought because he was older that he wouldn’t have this good of a match. I thought because his career was winding down he wouldn’t have this good of a match. I forgot one simple thing about the Ace of the Universe though: It was a big show. 

He pulled probably Naito’s second best performance of all time from him after the Kenny Omega match in the G1’s. It was fantastic, terrific, all the superlatives I can think of. At this point, it was match of the night. Thumbs super duper up.

Okada vs. Kenny Omega for the IWGP Heavyweight Title.

This is probably the best match I’ve ever seen. I’ve watched all of the Kobashi vs. Misawa matches, all of the Okada vs. Tanahashi matches, the best Manami Toyota matches, Akira Hokuto vs. Shinobu Kandori, all the great Toshiyo Yamada matches, all the best matches in the history of the fed. 

They do not compare to the way I was feeling both during and after this match. I have seen all the previous January 4 shows in the lead up to this. Nakamura vs. Ibushi was the best NJPW Tokyo Dome match I had ever seen before this one. 

The story telling, the absolute beating that both men took during this match, the near falls. I cannot really describe this match. It is just something else. Thumbs have officially broken off they are so far up.

**********

  • Best Match: Okada vs Kenny Omega.
  • Worst match: Tiger Mask W vs Tiger the Dark

Kenny Omega was perhaps the most protected that I have ever seen a wrestler be in a match before. He hit no One Winged Angels, and not a single Croytes Wrath. It took FOUR rainmakers to keep him down. And for a measure on how good I thought this match was, I bought the first one as the finish.

For the record, if this were the fed, Kenny would hit at least two One Winged Angels. Those guys have no idea how to protect a move. Also: Was a sense of Misawa/Kobashi 99 in the main event. The champ taking all the punishment I can humanly imagine before somehow walking out with the belt.

Now I’m gearing up for LIJ vs. CHAOS gang wars part 2. Guess Gedo’s been watching some Dragon Gate.

– Christy Pankhurst

**********

What an amazing last four matches!!

Show started a bit slow. I liked the Bucks tag — 3.5 stars. Like ishii and Yano, good mix with the serious guy and the joker.

KUSHIDA is amazing and always shows up on the big shows. Really liked this match even though they missed a thing or two. 4.5 stars.

Tanahashi vs. Naito was awesome. Right when I thought Tanahashi had it won, it got even better!! 4.75 stars.

Omega and Okada was insane. Almost bordering on going too far with that dragon suplex off the top rope. As amazing as it was, that spot could have been left out and it still would have been a classic. I’m happy Okada seemed ok for the rest of the match.  That missile dropkick off the top was just awesome and Kenny’s springboard moonsault was Ibushi-esque. Those last like seven minutes were so crazy, Okada as always has the best finishing sequences. 5 stars.

Great show and great crowd. They weren’t into the foreigner vs foreigner matches which I guess were the intermission. But when the business end of the card came around they were into everything. Better than most US crowds.

– Kyle Jaworski

**********

I found WK11 to be the best WK yet, even surpassing WK9. The undercard was good and the big four main events all delivered. KUSHIDA vs. Takahashi was a fantastic way to start off the main events — 4 1/2*. Shibata vs. Goto was an incredible hard hitting match that lived up to what’s expected of big NEVER matches. The ending 20 or seconds were crazy. I’d go 4 3/4*.

Naito vs. Tanahashi was incredible with great storytelling and psychology, the crowd was eating everything up — 5*, however Omega vs. Okada was even more spectacular and it seems unfair that they both get the same rating. One of the best matches I’ve ever witnessed. It got an emotional investment out of me I’ve never had before. Just beautiful stuff for 46 minutes, absolute 5* classic in my eyes. Just a very easy watch PPV that delivered well in all matches.

– Hunter Dunn

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Kazuchika Okada vs. Kenny Omega
  • Worst Match: Cody Rhodes vs. Juice Robinson

What a main event match! After things slowed down with a mostly dead crowd for consecutive gaijin vs. gaijin singles matches, YTR picked them back up. And from Takahashi/KUSHIDA on it was one great match after another, culminating with an absolute classic in Okada vs. Omega.

– Lou Pickney

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Omega Vs. Okada
  • Worst Match: Robinson Vs. Cody

I will be blunt. I have been watching wrestling for 25 years. I’ve seen Shawn Michaels WrestleMania matches, I’ve seen Misawa classics, I’ve seen matches from all styles and promotions from around the world, and quite frankly, and I can say this with absolutely no hyperbole whatsoever, that Omega/Okada was better than all of those matches in every way imaginable. If the rating system used was originally four stars and a fifth star had to be created when Terry Funk came around as the legend said, then you might as well start going by a six star scale because anything below that would be a disservice to this match and the competitors in it.

I also had the Goto/Shibata and Tanahashi/Naito matches at *****. I find it amazing that NJPW can put on a five hour show and it can feel so fulfilling and yet WWE can put on a six and a half hour show and it can feel so empty.

– Jamie Sullivan

**********

I was at the Tokyo Dome tonight for Wrestle Kingdom 11. Here are some notes from the stadium:

  • The New Japan Rumble was lots of fun, the crowd was into it. Liger and Scott Norton got the biggest reactions.
  • Cody vs. Juice Robinson got a great reaction from the crowd considering it was a bout between an unknown and an under-carder. While exiting, Cody climbed on the the players dugout on the right side and gestured to the crowd. He got a huge ovation from the fans seated there.
  • O’Reilly vs. Cole on the other hand got the least response from the crowd. It was clearly a mistake putting two all-foreigners singles matches back-to-back. Cole’s victory got little reaction as well.
  • Takahashi vs. KUSHIDA was when the crowd came alive
  • Tanahashi’s new theme BOMBED. Tanahashi tried to get the crowd chanting “GO ACE!” There were fans behind me giggling at his efforts.
  • The Okada vs. Omega match was amazing. I didn’t realize it was going long until the announcer announced they were on the 30 minute mark. That announcement got a big reaction. As did the announcement for 35, 40 and 45 minutes. The crowd knew they were experiencing something special.

– Lak Gill

**********

Thumbs Up

  • Best Match: Kazuchika Okada vs Kenny Omega
  • Worst Match: NEVER 6-Man Gauntlet

I felt like this year’s Wrestle Kingdom had a weaker undercard than the past two years, but once we got into the final stretch you just had great match after great match. 

Will be tough to top Okada vs. Omega for MOTY. 

– Kevin Chiat

**********

Thumbs up

  • Best: Okada vs. Omega
  • Worst: Cody vs. Juice

 I thought the first five matches ranged from average to just plain boring, but then the show turned around bigly. Everything from the ROH Title match on was so damn great it made me have to give the show a big thumbs up. The last two matches were especially spectacular. Tanahashi/Naito demonstrated truly brilliant wrestling psychology while Omega/Okada put on an athletic clinic that should further cement them as two of the best of this generation. 

Although I liked a lot of the booking (especially Omega being kept strong in defeat to build to a rematch and LIJ all being champions) I’m a bit baffled by the undercard booking. Why proven guys like Ishii, YOSHI-HASHI, Ospreay and Ricochet were buried in multi-man matches while guys like Rocky Romero, Cody, and Juice Robinson got so much more of the spotlight just doesn’t make sense. Even if they weren’t given long undercard matches it would definitely have made the first hour much more entertaining. 

– Nick Randall

January 9, 2017 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: Ronda Rousey loses potential final fight, NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 11 review

The legacy of Ronda Rousey, the woman who in many ways changed the course of MMA and combat sports and entertainment history, took another unique turn on 12/30.

In her return 13 months after suffering her first career loss, she was beaten in just 48 seconds when challenging bantamweight champion Amanda Nunes.

Nunes, the hardest puncher in the division, came out landing punches. Rousey showed no head movement or punch defense as she just took one punch after another to the head until the fight was stopped.

Rousey, who did no promotional work for the fight, then left the cage without doing an interview, and left the T Mobile Center doing no interviews. Dana White said that she wasn’t in as bad a shape mentally after the loss as she was after the loss to Holly Holm.

Current subscribers click here to continue reading.

Big Audio Nightmare: Adam & Mike break down Wrestle Kingdom 11

The original alternate is back, very much sleep-deprived and tongue-tied, but also full of the type of fighting spirit that can only be received by staying up all night to watch the 2017 New Japan Wrestle Kingdom 11 show.

Second only to WWE’s WrestleMania as a destination spot on the calendar, Adam and Mike quickly run through the Tokyo Dome card and briefly give their thoughts on the results. What did we think the best match was? Who showcased the best individual performance? What direction will they go? How do they see in those Tiger masks? Is it okay to fantasy book Juice Robinson’s next five-to-seven years?

All of those questions will be answered, and more. It’s the podcast that knows sleep can be overrated, but Tetsuya Naito matches never can be. It’s the Adam and Mike BIG AUDIO NIGHTMARE~! Proudly here at F4WOnline.com.

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NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 11 live results: Kazuchika Okada vs. Kenny Omega

Preview by Joseph Currier

As they do every year on January 4th, New Japan Pro Wrestling presents their biggest show of the year tonight and into tomorrow morning as Wrestle Kingdom 11 takes place at the Tokyo Dome.

This year’s Dome show will be headlined by an IWGP Heavyweight Championship match with Kenny Omega challenging Kazuchika Okada. Omega won his spot in the match by winning last year’s G1 tournament and defending the title shot along the way.

An IWGP Intercontinental Championship match will be in the semi-main event with Tetsuya Naito defending against Hiroshi Tanahashi. That match will also feature the debut of Tanahashi’s new theme music after he announced that he would be replacing his old music at the end of last year.

NJPW’s other titles will be on the line as well. Katsuyori Shibata will defend his NEVER Openweight Championship against Hirooki Goto, KUSHIDA will put his junior heavyweight title on the line against Hiromu Takahashi, and all three tag titles will be up for grabs.

There will also be an ROH title match as Kyle O’Reilly takes on Adam Cole, Cody Rhodes will make his NJPW debut against Juice Robinson, and Kota Ibushi will again wrestle as Tiger Mask W against Tiger the Dark.

Our live coverage begins at 2:30 a.m. ET with the New Japan Rumble.

**********

Michael Elgin won the New Japan Rumble

It was a battle royal in Japan. Save for the surprise entries and a few fun spots, not much of anything. Gunn and Elgin exchanged power spots. Cheeseburger came in and eliminated Bone Soldier. Liger came in to help Cheeseburger against Gunn and Elgin, but it didn’t work.

Liger and Kobayashi did a nice exchange. Scott Norton came in and pinned Taguchi with a powerbomb, and he, Saito, Cheeseburger and Tenzan all ganged up on Elgin. He fought through, pinned Saito with a lariat and toppled Norton over the top rope. It boiled down to Elgin and Cheeseburger, who the crowd were into. They had a staredown, but obviously Elgin overpowered Cheeseburger, gave him the buckle bomb then pinned him with a spiral powerbomb.

The entrants, in order, were: Michael Elgin, Billy Gunn, Bone Soldier, Cheeseburger, Jushin Thunder Liger, Kuniaki Kobayashi, Tiger Mask, Manabu Nakanishi, Ryusuke Taguchi, Yoshitatsu, Yuji Nagata, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Hiro Saito and Scott Norton

Tiger Mask W defeated Tiger the Dark

Solid match while it lasted. Kind of disappointing considering who was involved, but this wasn’t supposed to be Kota Ibushi vs. ACH. Tiger the Dark did a great fosbury flop to the outside. Tiger Mask came back and did the Golden Triangle moonsault. Tiger the Dark hit a tombstone piledriver but Tiger Mask kicked out. Tiger the Dark kicked out of the tiger suplex but was pinned by the tiger bomb.

Roppongi Vice defeated The Young Bucks for the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship

The Bucks lived up to their word being covered in gold in this year’s tournament by walking to the ring in gold outfits with the PWG, ROH, IWGP Jr. belts and new Superkick Party tag team titles.

Good little match. Lots of fun spots and some clever storytelling with Romero, who was a weak link for a lot of the last year, coming back and scoring the win for his team. Bucks teased a countout spot early, though that doesn’t work because in New Japan titles do change hands via count out. Full of the quick back and forth action you’d expect from the Bucks and RPG Vice more than held their own.

Baretta shifted around Matt Jackson on his shoulders and Romero dropped him down with a knee in a cool double team spot. Baretta went for a senton and landed flat on his back on the entranceway which did NOT look good at all. This left Romero by himself while the Bucks worked on Romero, double teaming him. Bucks went for More Bang For Your Buck but Baretta got up and stopped Matt, allowing Romero to crucifix Nick for the flash pin and the titles.

Gauntlet Match for NEVER Six-Man Tag Team Championship: EVIL, BUSHI and SANADA defeated Ricochet/Satoshi Kojima, David Finlay and Bad Luck Fale/Yujiro Takahashi/Hangman Page

Fine match. This was a case where you can do the “the refs have no credibility” line because there was a bunch of that here. Most of the work was fine, for the most part. The Chaos and Bullet Club teams started off. Ospreay came in and did some great stuff, including the Sasuke special on the outside. Page and Ospreay had some really good chemistry in the ring. They were on the outside when Yujiro got the first pinfall with the pimp juice DDT.

This brought in the LIJ team. Match didn’t last long before LIJ did a ref bump and introduced chairs, laying out Yujiro with chairs. Sanada then submitted Yujiro, leading to the champions coming out. Finlay and Ricochet did a cool double senton to the outside. Kojima made a good hot tag. He was running wild until EVIL did a ref bump and BUSHI attacked Kojima with the mist. Kojima kicked out of a seated powerbomb by EVIL but didn’t kick out of the STO, making LIJ the new NEVER six man champions.

Cody defeated Juice Robinson

Good for what this was. Cody shows natural heel charisma that translates well as a Bullet Club member, and looked fine here. Juice looked good here as well. Cody went for a springboard, landing on the floor but Robinson grabbed him and gave him and overhead suplex, then followed it with a cannonball into the barricade.

Cody came back and focused on the leg, which Juice injured in the duration of the match. Cody trapped Juice in a modified Indian deathlock but Juice made it to the ropes. Juice went for the unprettier but Cody countered with the crossroads for the win.

Cody berated Kevin Kelly and Steve Corino (who he focused on a lot during the match) after the match, spraying water at the latter.

Adam Cole defeated Kyle O’Reilly to win the Ring of Honor World Championship

Very good match while this lasted. I wish this got more time as they were having a very intense back and forth match. Adam Cole appeared to be adhering to the Code of Honor, but spat at O’Reilly after doing it. Cole hit O’Reilly’s arm with a steel chair and worked on it. O’Reilly did a comeback and they had a good, hard hitting match. A lot of quick surges of back and forth shots. O’Reilly went for an armbar but Cole stomped on his head to break it. Cole laid out O’Reilly with a ton of superkicks then followed with a third Last Shot to win the title.

Show announcements:

  • New Beginning in Sapporo 2/5, in Osaka 2/11
  • New Japan Cup on 3/20
  • Sakura Genesis  on 4/9
  • Wrestling Dontaku on 5/3
  • Best of the Super Jr XXIV starts on 6/3
  • Dominion 6/11 in Osaka
  • G1 Climax 27 starts 7/17, finals in Sumo Hall 8/11, 8/12, 8/13
  • G1 Special in USA 7/1 and 7/2 in Los Angeles

Toru Yano & Tomohiro Ishii defeated Guerillas of Destiny and Great Bash Heel to win the IWGP Tag Team Championship

This kind of felt like a cluster with everyone doing spots at the same time. Action was fast paced, and perfectly okay for the most part. The announcers were losing it during commentary because GoD constantly swore, using pretty much every dirty word in the book during the bout. GBH came in and took control. Honma had it won with the kokeshi but was broken up. Tonga caught Honma with a gun stun and but fought out of Guerilla Warfare. Yano gets the tag but everyone else is unaware. He’s taken out as Ishii faces off against the two. Yano low blows them, allowing Ishii to give both a lariat, which allows Yano to roll up Loa to win the titles for his team.

Hiromu Takahashi defeated KUSHIDA to win the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship

First great match of the evening. This was the first match that felt like the crowd was there, as they were hot for everything and both guys did some great moves and had some really good sequences. Takahashi looked excellent in the last few minutes of the match. KUSHIDA started off hot early with a huge senton to the floor. There seemed to be a missed spot where Takahashi was supposed to hurricanrana KUSHIDA to the floor, but it didn’t work. That didn’t stop him from flying off with his scary looking senton to the floor.

They did a great sequence leading to Takahashi leaping off the apron but KUSHIDA grabbed him in midair with an armbar on the outside. KUSHIDA locked in the hoverboard lock in the ring. Takahashi escaped. KUSHIDA fought for it again but Takahashi refused to budge. KUSHIDA laid out Takahashi with a straight right hand but Takahashi countered with an overhead belly to belly into the turnbuckle. Takahashi did an amazing waistlock rana bomb off the top rope, followed it with a running death valley driver into the turnbuckle and finished off KUSHIDA with the time bomb, signaling another title change.

Hirooki Goto defeated Katsuyori Shibata to win the NEVER Openweight Championship

Really great match, one of the best they’ve had in a long time.This had great intensity too as the crowd picked up big time during this match. Lots of stiff back and forth shots. Shibata locked in the sleeper as Goto tried to get to the ropes but Shibata took him to the ground. Goto writhed until he finally got a leg on the middle rope.

Goto fired back with headbutts and landed the ushigiroshi. He tried for the GTR but Shibata countered, only for Goto to come back with the shouten kai for a really good near fall. They did a sick series of headbutts that Goto got the upper hand in, hit an inverted GTR, then hit a regular one to, yes, win the title. All titles have changed hands thus far.

Tetsuya Naito defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi to retain the IWGP Intercontinental Championship

Tanahashi debuted his new theme. It’s not High Energy and I’ll leave it at that.

Awesome match. This had all the telltale signs of a big time title match and delivered, with tons of great callback spots and near falls. As far as Dome crowd reactions go this was the most heated I’ve heard them in years. Started off with your simple back and forth. Things heated up when Tanahashi hit a slingblade on the apron then hopped off with the high fly flow to the outside.

Naito takes him down with a submission but Tanahashi counters with the cloverleaf, working on Naito’s injured knees that Tanahashi worked on early in the match. Tanahashi hit two sling blades and a high fly flow but Naito dodged a second and hit the Destino. Tanahashi countered a second. The two took turns stomping at each other’s knees until Tanahashi unleashed a dragon suplex, a high fly flow then went for another but Naito got the knees up. Incredible heat at this point. Naito hit the Destino off the top rope, then followed with another to retain his title.

Kazuchika Okada defeated Kenny Omega to retain the IWGP Heavyweight Championship

Kenny Omega came out to a movie scene from Terminator where he stole a guy’s clothes, then came out wearing a terminator mask and carrying a gun. Okada came out with dollar bills streaming everywhere.

Incredible match, it’s one of those matches that is already probably in contention for match of the year. They went about 45 minutes and started slow, but worked an incredible match with lots of great callbacks, some awesome spots, and a really hot 10-15 minute back and forth that will be very hard to emulate for years to come. Kenny Omega is a next level performer and showcased it here in spades.

Like the previous match, mostly back and forth to start things off. They go to the barricades where Okada counters Omega by laying him out with a draping DDT.  Okada brings out a table, a callback to a Road to show Omega sent Okada crashing through a table. Omega starts mounting a comeback, hitting a huge swanton on the outside then followed with a sick looking missile dropkick to the back of Okada’s head.

Okada goes for an elbow, but Omega gets his knees up and gains control. He unleashes a baseball slide that sends Okada through the barricade into the announcer’s section, then flies off with a springboard moonsault all the way into the crowd. He follows that by slamming the table on top of Okada and hitting a double foot stomp off the apron.

Meanwhile, on the outside, the Young Bucks have set up the table for Omega to use. They tease both going through the table. They go back and forth into the ring until Okada launches him off with a HUGE back body drop that sends him crashing through the table. Okada is reeling as Omega somehow recovers and they start teasing doing something off the top rope. Omega hits a dragon suplex that lands Okada RIGHT on his neck. Geez.

Omega goes for the running knee strike but Okada counters with a German. Omega blocks the rainmaker but eats a dropkick. Omega fires back with the reverse rana and a knee strike. He tries for the One Winged Angel but somehow Okada lands on his feet and takes out Omega with the tombstone, then hits the rainmaker but Omega kicks out. Omega fires back with shots then rakes the eyes. Okada dropkicks him so hard he flies across the ring and into the turnbuckles.

Okada goes for the tombstone again but Omega counters into a package piledriver. He hits a snap German suplex and a running knee strike, then another and goes for the One Winged Angel but Okada grabs Omega’s wrist jumps off and hits another rainmaker. He holds onto Omega but he starts firing back with really stiff shots. Undaunted, Okada hits another rainmaker but Omega again comes back and hits a really stiff knee to the face. Omega again goes for the One Winged Angel but Okada counters it, hits a jumping tombstone then another rainmaker for the win.

Gedo and Okada cut a promo after the match, doing their usual stuff of how Okada is on a whole other level and will do the same in 2017.

Final thoughts —

A really great show, with the last four title matches delivering what they set out to accomplish. Matches in the undercard could have been better, but all were solid and didn’t drag the show down. Not the best top to bottom WK card of all time, but this was a great show that’ll be tough to top in 2017.

WOL: Solo Sempervive on ADR dustup, Raw recap & WK11

Wrestling Observer Live with Mike Sempervive returns today (solo as Bossman Bryan Alvarez, under duress, is not here) with tons of news to talk about including the latest incident with Alberto El Patron, the closing segment of WWE Raw, and tonight’s New Japan Wrestle Kingdom XI! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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NJPW Fan Festival results: Tomoyuki Oka debuts; Jushin Liger & Tiger Mask IV team up

From reader Matt Storm

I attended last night’s New Japan Pro Wrestling Fan Festival to promote Wrestle Kingdom 11 and here are some various thoughts.

– I haven’t been to a WWE Axcess yet so I can’t compare the two but this was well organized. There were plenty of long lines for talent doing autographs and pictures, especially for Hiroshi Tanahashi and Kazuchika Okada. Due to those lines, time was very short for people to spend with them, leading to a very quick in and out situation. Nobody seemed disappointed or upset however.

– Gedo beating Kazuchika Okada at Tekken following the official reveal of the NJPW content in the upcoming Tekken 7 game was a sight to behold. Many popped when he won while some playfully booed.

– Cody received a pretty big ovation when he made his entrance and cut a promo on Juice Robinson.

– All three matches held featured veterans against young lions which included the anticipated debut of Tomoyuki Oka:

> Yuji Nagata defeated Tomoyuki Oka via submission with a crossface

I thought this was a great debut for Oka. He has plenty of room for improvement but he showed great poise and looked comfortable as could be out there. Nagata took him down right away but he countered into an armlock which got an audible gasp from the crowd. Oka kept attempting a kimura which Nagata prevented with stiff slaps to the face, laying them in any chance he got.  Oka tried standing with him only to be lit up with kicks everywhere imaginable.

Midway through, Oka won the crowd over and you could see Kidani going nuts over him as he watched from the floor.  Oka hit a belly to belly suplex and locked in the young lion’s crab. Crowd went crazy thinking he would actually pull off the upset. A mid-ring exchange of forearms saw Oka drop Nagata for a close nearfall.  Eventually, Nagata powered up and gained a nearfall with vicious body kicks. Nagata delivered an Xploder transitioned into the crossface and Oka was forced to submit.

> Manabu Nakanishi defeated Henare

This was a battle of World Tag League partners. Just from the tournament to this match, Henare showed nice improvement. Manabu was in molasses mode but they still had a decent match.

Story was Nakanishi being too powerful for Henare to get an advantage on. He hit a shoulder tackle out of the gate and beat Henare down with headbutts and chops galore.  Henare took over when Nakanishi missed a kneedrop following a corner clothesline.  Henare went after the knee with several kicks but Nakanishi refused to go down.

After several failed attempts, Henare finally suplexed Nakanishi to a good pop.  A shoulder block was followed by the crab but Nakanishi powered out. Henare escaped the Torture Rack and got a nearfall off a rollup. Nakanishi delivered an ax handle that was nicely executed.  He followed up with the Hercules Cutter out of the Rack for the pinfall.

> Jushin Liger and Tiger Mask IV defeated Hirai Kawato and Rysuke Taguchi

Solid match as Liger and Tiger were great as the grizzled, cranky vets that Kawato annoyed and gave many fits. Kawato worked the majority of the match and is still very, very green. I was more impressed with him here though than his World Tag League tour outings. Kawato worked over Liger in the corner until Jushin had enough and nearly caved in his face with a palm strike.

Taguchi tagged in as did Tiger and they had a nice series. Taguchi went into ass attack mode but Tiger avoided it and delivered a backbreaker.  Liger threw Taguchi onto the floor, hit a baseball slide, and then locked in the Romero Special.

Liger worked on the neck and tagged in Tiger. They worked Taguchi over but he mounted a comeback in full ass attack mode. Kawato tagged back in but was immediately drilled with kicks from Tiger. Liger tossed him outside and threw him into a barricade. Just to show how grumpy he was, Liger then wacked Kawato with a chair a few times.

Kawato rallied as he and Taguchi dispatched Liger with an ass attack/dropkick combination.  Kawato slammed Tiger for a nearfall. Liger broke up the young lion’s crab on Tiger and the action broke down.

Kawato hit a missile dropkick on Tiger for a nearfall. He went for another dropkick but Tiger moved and he nailed Taguchi. Kawato survived the Tiger Driver but a Tiger Suplex put him away for the pinfall.

The final few minutes of this were excellent. Another match where the crowd bought into the rookie upset win.

NJPW announces change in Wrestle Kingdom 11 tag title match

Though they appeared to reveal the full Wrestle Kingdom 11 card last week, New Japan Pro Wrestling announced a change in two of the show’s title matches on Monday morning.

Tomohiro Ishii will now team with Toru Yano to make the IWGP Tag Team Championship match at the Tokyo Dome on January 4th a three-way bout with champions Guerrillas of Destiny defending against Ishii & Yano in addition to World Tag League winners Togi Makabe & Tomoaki Honma.

Yano had announced his intent to challenge for the titles at NJPW’s first Road to the Tokyo Dome show last week before teaming with Ishii the next night.

With Ishii previously being scheduled to compete in the NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Championship gauntlet at the Dome, Jado will now take his place as he joins the CHAOS team of Will Ospreay & YOSHI-HASHI. That match will also include champions Satoshi Kojima, Ricochet & David Finlay, a Los Ingobernables de Japon team of SANADA, EVIL & BUSHI, and a Bullet Club team of Bad Luck Fale, Yujiro Takahashi & Hangman Page.

NJPW Road to Wrestle Kingdom 11 results: LIJ vs. Tanahashi & KUSHIDA

The last two shows of the year for New Japan are all focused on Wrestle Kingdom 11, with all matches for that show now mostly being set, barring an exception or two as you’ll soon see.

Tonight’s show took place at Korakuen Hall, featuring a big main event as Hiroshi Tanahashi & KUSHIDA battled Tetsuya Naito & Hiromu Takahashi, who is making his official return to NJPW after being gone for a few years on a North American excursion. Here are the results:

Ryusuke Taguchi, Tiger Mask & Yuji Nagata defeated Yoshitatsu, Manabu Nakanishi & Henare

Okay match. Yoshitatu’s new haircut just looks terrible and actually is kind of off-putting. Nakanishi and Nagata brawled since they have a match coming up tomorrow. Henare had Taguchi in the torture rack, but he escaped and countered with an ankle lock. Henare tried to escape, but Taguchi buckled down and scored the submission.

Nakanishi then brawled with Nagata after the match. No idea what this feud is over.

Tomohiro Ishii defeated Chase Owens

This kind of felt out of place at first, but it shaped up to be a pretty good match towards the end. Owens isn’t top tier but has improved a lot over the last year. Ishii threw him around the barricades but Owens countered and brawled into the stands. Owens tried to do a countout win but Ishii made it back in at 19.

Owens kicked him in the chest and Ishii responded by starting to no sell all of his offense. Owens came back with an eye rake and a springboard codebreaker and even a lungblower but Ishii kicked out of it all. He went for the package piledriver but Ishii countered and laid him out with a lariat. He followed through with the sliding D then the brainbuster for the win.

EVIL, BUSHI & SANADA defeated Satoshi Kojima, David Finlay & Hiroyoshi Tenzan

Good six-man bout. The action was mostly between Tencozy and the rest of the LIJ until Finlay made the tag. He ran wild and looked good for a bit against EVIL, who eventually countered and looked to have the match won when Tencozy ran in. They were thwarted, however, as Finlay was isolated again, leading EVIL to score the win with the STO.

Juice Robinson, Togi Makabe & Tomoaki Honma defeated Guerillas of Destiny & Bone Soldier

Fine match, but the real story was toward the end of the bout. Robinson blocked the gun stun once and did a series of counters with Tama Tonga until he finally laid out Robinson with the move. Roa came in and was about to lay him out with the finish until all of a sudden the bell rang. GoD, confused, looked to see what happened, and in fact it was none other than Toru Yano who rang the bell.

Makabe came in during all the confusion and cleaned house. Tonga tried the gun stun on Honma, but he blocked it and walked right into a Robinson unprettier for the win. That’s a big win for him, don’t remember the last time he scored the winning fall for his team.

Yano low blowed the winners after the match, then the losers when they jumped him. He cut a promo saying he wanted to be involved in the tag title bout at Wrestle Kingdom 11, noting he didn’t have a partner yet.

Jado & Hirooki Goto defeated Katsuyori Shibata & Jushin Thunder Liger

This was fine, but nothing special. Jado seems to be back full-time after being head booker of NOAH for the last couple of years. Goto and Shibata, of course, were the story of the match and they interacted a bit. Goto got the win over Liger with the GTR. Shibata was laid out during the pinfall and rolled out of the ring after, looking upset.

Bad Luck Fale, Yujiro Takahashi & Kenny Omega defeated Kazuchika Okada, YOSHI-HASHI & Gedo

Solid match. It was mostly a battle between Omega/Okada and Gedo/Yujiro, with Fale occasionally coming in for his big guy spots. Omega and Okada had an exchange leading Omega to lay him out with a knee strike. Yujiro followed suit by laying Gedo out with the pimp juice DDT for the win.

Hiromu Takahashi & Tetsuya Naito defeated KUSHIDA & Hiroshi Tanahashi

Fun main event. Takahashi looked good, and everyone else did as well, with some fun tag team work and quick action. Takahashi’s first big move of the match was to go into the crowd, do a running leap over the barricade, and dropkick Tanahashi in the chest. Tanahashi was isolated against Naito and Takahashi and they double teamed him. KUSHIDA made the hot tag and laid both out, but Naito went back on the attack. He went for the Destino but KUSHIDA countered with a near fall. The pace picked up with some good tag team wrestling and counters.

KUSHIDA tried to trap Takahashi in the hoverboard lock but it was broken up. KUSHIDA went back to the arm but Takahashi laid him out with a German suplex and also laid out Tanahashi with one as well. He gave KUSHIDA a Death Valley Driver into the turnbuckle then pinned him with a spinning Death Valley Driver for the win.

Final thoughts:

This felt like a really good episode of Raw, highlighting some big matches for the next show while also delivering a surprise or two. While there were a few so-so matches, nothing was bad and everything happened for a reason. There’s another show happening tomorrow, so we’ll see what big angles they have in store for the final build towards Wrestle Kingdom 11.

NJPW’s Wrestle Kingdom 11 airing on AXS TV starting January 13th

On Tuesday’s edition of Wrestling Observer Live, Jim Ross broke the news that New Japan’s Wrestle Kingdom 11 will begin to air on AXS TV just one week after it happens, broken up into four weeks. 

Additionally, Ross announced that the weekly show has been renewed for 50+ episodes in 2017 and will move to 8 PM EST on Fridays. He will continue to work alongside Josh Barnett.

WK11 will begin on Friday, January 13th, with the IWGP Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Kenny Omega match, and a week later, they will air Tanahashi vs. I-C Champion Naito. Broadcast matches for the subsequent two weeks have yet to be announced.

Ross first announced NJPW action just over two years ago at Wrestle Kingdom 9 that aired live on PPV. He began working for AXS TV earlier this year as the lead voice on NJPW’s weekly Friday show, taking over for the WWE-bound Mauro Ranallo.