Five title matches official for NJPW Dominion

NJPW has confirmed a slate of title matches for Dominion 2026.

One of NJPW’s biggest events of the year, Dominion will be held at Osaka-jo Hall on June 14. A press conference was held overnight with NJPW making its first match announcements for the show. It was officially confirmed that the main event will be Callum Newman putting his IWGP Heavyweight Championship on the line against Yota Tsuji.

Newman vs. Tsuji is a rematch from Sakura Genesis, where Newman defeated Tsuji to become the youngest IWGP Heavyweight Champion in history. Tsuji then earned another shot at the belt by pinning Newman in a tag team match earlier this week.

Among the other title matches set is the first defense for new IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Andrade El Idolo. The AEW star defeated Tsuji for the title at Wrestling Dontaku and will now defend in a three-way bout against Shota Umino and Drilla Moloney.

Six matches in total have been confirmed for Dominion so far, with five having championship stakes. The show will air live on NJPW World with English commentary.

NJPW Dominion 2026 (Sunday, June 14) —

  • IWGP Heavyweight Champion Callum Newman defends against Yota Tsuji
  • Three-way match: IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Andrade El Idolo defends against Shota Umino and Drilla Moloney
  • IWGP Tag Team Champions Yuto-Ice & OSKAR defend against Great-O-Khan & Henare
  • NEVER Openweight Champion Ren Narita defends against Aaron Wolf
  • NJPW World Television Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against SANADA
  • Zack Sabre Jr. & Ryohei Oiwa vs. Yuya Uemura & Taichi

The rest of the card will take shape in the coming weeks as NJPW is set to begin its Best of the Super Juniors tour this Thursday (May 14).

NJPW Dominion 2026 main event set

The main event of NJPW Dominion 2026 is now set with Yota Tsuji earning an IWGP Heavyweight Championship rematch.

At the June 14 event in Osaka, Tsuji will challenge Callum Newman for the IWGP Heavyweight title. That was confirmed when Tsuji pinned the champion in a tag team match at Ignition to Dominion today. Tsuji & Shingo Takagi defeated Newman & Jake Lee in a bout that had significant stakes. If Tsuji & Takagi had lost, neither would have been able to challenge Newman for his title again.

Tsuji had a three-month reign as IWGP Heavyweight Champion before dropping the belt to Newman at Sakura Genesis this April. In today’s tag match, he connected with a Gene Blaster spear to get the pin on Newman after Takagi took out Lee. Tsuji then got on the microphone and promised to get NJPW back on the right track after the dark road Newman has taken the company down as champion.

This will be the second defense of Newman’s reign. The youngest IWGP Heavyweight Champion in history, he retained over Takagi at night two of Wrestling Dontaku earlier this week.

Dominion is traditionally one of NJPW’s biggest events of the year. Though not confirmed yet, an IWGP Tag Team title match is being built up with Yuto-Ice & OSKAR defending against Great-O-Khan & HENARE. Those teams needed to be separated after O-Khan & HENARE were on the winning side of a 10-man tag match at Ignition to Dominion.

NJPW Dominion 2026 (Sunday, June 14) —

  • IWGP Heavyweight Champion Callum Newman defends against Yota Tsuji

NJPW announces full card for Ignition to Dominion

The full card has now been confirmed for NJPW Ignition to Dominion.

Taking place in Karatsu this Wednesday, the show could set the stage for the Dominion 2026 main event. Callum Newman & Jake Lee are facing off against Yota Tsuji & Shingo Takagi. If either Unbound Co. member scores a pinfall over Newman, they earn an IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot against him at Dominion. But if United Empire win, neither Tsuji nor Takagi can challenge for the title again as long as Newman is champion.

Newman issued the challenge for this match after cheating to retain his title against Takagi at Wrestling Dontaku. The youngest IWGP Heavyweight Champion in history, Newman won the belt from Tsuji last month at Sakura Genesis.

Dominion is being held in Osaka on June 14. An IWGP Tag Team title match with Yuto-Ice & OSKAR defending against Great-O-Khan & HENARE of United Empire looks likely for that show. At ignition, they’ll be part of a 10-man tag match with Yuto-Ice, OSKAR, Taiji Ishimori, Gedo & Daiki Nagai facing O-Khan, HENARE, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young & Zane Jay.

The full card for Ignition is listed below. It’s airing live on NJPW World at 4 a.m. Eastern/1 a.m. Pacific and is the last stop for NJPW before Best of the Super Juniors begins on May 14.

NJPW Ignition to Dominion (Wednesday, May 6) —

  • Callum Newman & Jake Lee vs. Yota Tsuji & Shingo Takagi
  • Yuto-Ice, OSKAR, Taiji Ishimori, Gedo & Daiki Nagai vs. Great-O-Khan, HENARE, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young & Zane Jay
  • Aaron Wolf, Oleg Boltin & Tiger Mask vs. Ren Narita, Yujiro Takahashi & Dick Togo
  • Yuya Uemura & Masatora Yasuda vs. Ryohei Oiwa & Kosei Fujita
  • Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. Taichi & El Desperado
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Tatsuya Matsumoto vs. Toru Yano, YOH & Master Wato
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Taisei Nakahara vs. SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru

NJPW sets up tag team match with IWGP title implications

A high-stakes tag team match looks set to take place on the road to NJPW Dominion.

Night two of Wrestling Dontaku ended with IWGP Heavyweight Champion Callum Newman issuing a challenge to Yota Tsuji & Shingo Takagi. At Ignition to Dominion this Wednesday (May 6), Newman & Jake Lee will team up against the Unbound Co. duo. If United Empire win, neither Tsuji nor Takagi can challenge Newman for the IWGP Heavyweight title again. But if either Tsuji or Takagi manage to score a pinfall over Newman, that competitor earns the right to challenge for his belt in the main event of Dominion on June 14.

NJPW has not officially announced the tag match or revealed the full card for Ignition to Dominion. The show is airing live on New Japan World on Wednesday with a start time of 4 a.m. Eastern/1 a.m. Pacific.

At Dontaku today, Newman used a low blow to retain his IWGP Heavyweight Championship over Takagi. It was Newman’s first defense since winning the title from Tsuji at Sakura Genesis 2026.

Newman’s immediate focus remains on the United Empire/Unbound Co. feud, but a match against his former mentor Will Ospreay appears to be the ultimate direction. Issues between Newman and Ospreay continued to build at Dontaku, where Ospreay did not approve of Newman cheating to win. Ospreay was then initially reluctant to help United Empire with their post-match attack on Takagi and Tsuji. Backstage, Ospreay reaffirmed his commitment to United Empire and said he’s trying his best to be the kind of competitor Newman wants him to be.

Night two of Dontaku saw United Empire capture more gold with Ospreay, Great-O-Khan & HENARE defeating Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Oleg Boltin for the NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team titles.

New champion crowned at NJPW Wrestling Dontaku night one

Andrade El Idolo is the new IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion.

He defeated Yota Tsuji for the title today at NJPW Wrestling Dontaku night one in Fukuoka, Japan.

The finish of the match saw Andrade hit two DMs on his opponent, the first into the ring post and the second to the mat before scoring the pinfall.

It’s the second title loss for Tsuji in under a month, as he also dropped the IWGP World Heavyweight title to Callum Newman at Sakura Genesis on April 4.

Following the match, Andrade asked who his first challenger would be. This brought out both Shota Umino and Drilla Maloney. Andrade then said he would defend the title against both of them in a three-way match, although a date has not been announced.

This was the seventh title change in the history of the Global title, which dates back to Wrestle Kingdom 18 in 2024. Andrade is the fifth wrestler to win the title and becomes the sixth champion in the belt’s lineage.

Full coverage of night one of Wrestling Dontaku is available here. Quick results are below.

NJPW Wrestling Dontaku night one results for May 3, 2026

  • IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji lost his belt to Andrade El Idolo
  • NEVER Openweight Champion Ren Narita retained against Oleg Boltin
  • Aaron Wolf defeated Don Fale
  • Shingo Takagi, Drilla Moloney, Taiji Ishimori, Robbie X, & Daiki Nagai defeated Callum Newman, Jake Lee, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young, & Zane Jay
  • Konosuke Takeshita & Shota Umino defeated Chase Owens & Yujiro Takahashi
  • Will Ospreay, HENARE, & Great-O-Khan defeated Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI, & Tatsuya Matsumoto
  • Yuya Uemura, Taichi, El Desperado, & Místico defeated Ryohei Oiwa, Hartley Jackson, Robbie Eagles, & Kosei Fujita
  • OSKAR & Yuto-Ice defeated Tomoaki Honma & Masatora Yasuda
  • Toru Yano, YOH, & Master Wato defeated Tiger Mask, Ryusuke Taguchi, & Taisei Nakahara

Andrade El Idolo challenges Yota Tsuji to IWGP Global title rematch

Andrade El Idolo is going to get another shot at the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship.

The Road to Wrestling Dontaku began on Sunday at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. On the show, Yota Tsuji, Shingo Takagi, Daiki Nagai, and Gedo defeated Callum Newman, Francesco Akira, Jake Lee, and Zane Jay, with Tsuji pinning Jay after a Gene Blaster.

After the match, a video played on the screen with Andrade challenging Tsuji for an IWGP Global title shot. Andrade unsuccessfully challenged Tsuji for the belt at The New Beginning USA show on February 27.

In the video, Andrade said:

“Last time, I didn’t lose. That match was to study you, to figure out how to beat you. Everything happens for a reason. I don’t know what happened with Gabe Kidd, and I don’t care because I beat him.

So I challenge you for the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship.

But I want this match not in the United States, not in USA. I want this match in Japan because I want to embarrass you in front of your own people. Just tell me where, when, and at what time. See you there, because this title is mi destino.”

Tsuji responded by saying he would be waiting for him on May 3, which is the date for night one of Wrestling Dontaku in Fukuoka.

NJPW1972.com later revealed the match has been made official.

Tsuji was originally scheduled to defend the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship against Gabe Kidd on the show. However, Kidd suffered a shoulder injury at AEW Dynasty, and New Japan Pro-Wrestling announced last week that he would not be cleared in time for Dontaku.

The updated lineup for next month’s shows in Fukuoka is below.

NJPW Wrestling Dontaku 2026 —

Night one (Sunday, May 3):

  • IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji defends against Andrade El Idolo
  • NEVER Openweight Champion Ren Narita defends against Oleg Boltin
  • Aaron Wolf vs. Don Fale
  • Shingo Takagi, Drilla Moloney, Taiji Ishimori, Robbie X & Daiki Nagai vs. Callum Newman, Jake Lee, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young & Zane Jay
  • Konosuke Takeshita & Shota Umino vs. Chase Owens & Yujiro Takahashi
  • Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Tatsuya Matsumoto vs. Will Ospreay, HENARE & Great-O-Khan
  • Yuya Uemura, Taichi, El Desperado & Mistico vs. Ryohei Oiwa, Hartley Jackson, Robbie Eagles & Kosei Fujita
  • Tomoaki Honma & Masatora Yasuda vs. OSKAR & Yuto-Ice
  • Toru Yano, YOH & Master Wato vs. Tiger Mask, Ryusuke Taguchi & Taisei Nakahara

Night two (Monday, May 4): 

  • IWGP Heavyweight Champion Callum Newman defends against Shingo Takagi
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Oleg Boltin defend against Will Ospreay, HENARE & Great-O-Khan
  • Yota Tsuji, Drilla Moloney, Taiji Ishimori & Robbie X vs. Jake Lee, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young & Zane Jay
  • Yuya Uemura & Taichi vs. Ryohei Oiwa & Hartley Jackson
  • El Desperado & Mistico vs. Robbie Eagles & Kosei Fujita
  • Aaron Wolf, Toru Yano, Tiger Mask, YOH & Master Wato vs. Ren Narita, Don Fale, DOUKI, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. OSKAR & Yuto-Ice
  • Ryusuke Taguchi & Tatsuya Matsumoto vs. Gedo & Daiki Nagai
  • NJPW World Television Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Chase Owens
  • Pre-show: Masatora Yasuda vs. Taisei Nakahara

NJPW announces title matches for Sakura Genesis 2026

Coming out of the New Japan Cup finals, NJPW has revealed most of the card for Sakura Genesis 2026.

United Empire’s Callum Newman was crowned the New Japan Cup winner this past weekend. With that victory, he now heads to the main event of Sakura Genesis on April 4 for an IWGP Heavyweight Championship match against Yota Tsuji. It will be the second title defense of Tsuji’s reign. He already holds a victory over United Empire member Jake Lee.

In total, four championship bouts are part of the announced Sakura Genesis lineup. The IWGP Tag Team titles will be on the line when TMDK’s Zack Sabre Jr. & Ryohei Oiwa challenge Oskar & Yuto-Ice. This is a rematch from the main event of New Year Dash 2026, where Oskar & Yuto-Ice retained over Sabre & Oiwa.

Konosuke Takeshita will make another defense of the NJPW World Television Championship, this time against Shota Umino. Takeshita won the belt from El Phantasmo last month and successfully defended against Yujiro Takahashi at the New Japan Cup finals.

Plus, Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Oleg Boltin will put their NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team titles on the line against House of Torture (Ren Narita, Yujiro Takahashi & Chase Owens).

Sakura Genesis is being held at Sumo Hall in Tokyo and will stream live on NJPW World.

NJPW Sakura Genesis 2026 (Saturday, April 4) —

  • IWGP Heavyweight Champion Yota Tsuji defends against Callum Newman
  • IWGP Tag Team Champions The Knock Out Brothers (Oskar & Yuto-Ice) defend against Zack Sabre Jr. & Ryohei Oiwa
  • NJPW World Television Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Shota Umino
  • NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions Hirooki Goto, YOSHI-HASHI & Oleg Boltin defend against Ren Narita, Yujiro Takahashi & Chase Owens
  • Aaron Wolf, YOH, Toru Yano & Master Wato vs. Don Fale, DOUKI, SHO & Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • Shingo Takagi, Taiji Ishimori & Robbie X vs. Jake Lee, Francesco Akira & Jakob Austin Young
  • Togi Makabe & Tiger Mask vs. Hartley Jackson & Kosei Fujita
  • Pre-show: KUSHIDA & Masatora Yasuda vs. Tatsuya Matsumoto & Taisei Nakahara

NJPW sets date for New Japan Cup winner’s IWGP World title match

New Japan Pro Wrestling has made Yota Tsuji’s next defense of the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship official.

Tsuji will defend his title on April 4 at Sakura Genesis against the winner of the New Japan Cup, which is set to kick off on March 4.

The brackets for the upcoming tournament are below:

Left side —

  • March 4: Yuya Uemura vs. Great-O-Khan (winner faces Drilla Moloney on March 10)
  • March 4: Aaron Wolf vs. Don Fale (winner faces Shingo Takagi on March 10)
  • March 5: Taichi vs. Ren Narita (winner faces Tomohiro Ishii on March 12)
  • March 5: El Phantasmo vs. Oleg Boltin (winner faces HENARE on March 12)

Right side —

  • March 6: YOSHI-HASHI vs. Jake Lee (winner faces Hirooki Goto on March 13)
  • March 6: OSKAR vs. Callum Newman (winner faces Hartley Jackson on March 13)
  • March 8: Shota Umino vs. Chase Owens (winner faces Yujiro Takahashi on March 14)
  • March 8: Yuto-Ice vs. Ryohei Oiwa (winner faces Zack Sabre Jr. on March 14)

This will be the fourth year in a row the New Japan Cup winner has challenged the champion at Sakura Genesis. David Finlay was last year’s winner, and he lost his title challenge to Hirooki Goto on the show.

The match is set to be Tsuji’s second defense of the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, which he won from Konosuke Takeshita at Wrestle Kingdom 20 on January 4, 2026. He successfully defended the title on February 11 at The New Beginning in Osaka against Jake Lee. Tsuji was also in action on Saturday in Trenton, New Jersey, where he successfully defended the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship against Andrade El Idolo at The New Beginning USA.

This year’s Sakura Genesis will take place at Ryogoku Kokugikan (Sumo Hall) in Tokyo. No other matches have been announced for the card thus far.

Number one contender for Global title crowned at NJPW New Beginning in Osaka

The next challenger for the IWGP Global Championship is set.

Andrade El Idolo defeated Gabe Kidd at New Beginning in Osaka on Wednesday to become the new number one contender. After a hard-hitting battle, Andrade managed to hit Kidd with an elbow and connected with the DM for the win, setting the stage for his title match at New Beginning USA on February 27.

Shortly before Wrestle Kingdom 20, it was revealed that Idolo had joined the United Empire and was victorious in their tag team match on January 4. Soon after, Kidd issued the challenge for Osaka. In the days prior to their match, it was announced that the winner would get a shot at Tsuji’s Global title in New Jersey.

Idolo has momentum both in NJPW and in AEW, where he is a member of the Don Callis Family. He will wrestle Hangman Page this weekend at Grand Slam Australia where the winner will challenge MJF for the AEW World title at Revolution next month.

Here is the updated card for New Beginning USA:

NJPW New Beginning USA (February 27)

  • IWGP Global title: Yota Tsuji defends against Andrade El Idolo
  • AEW National title: Ricochet defends against Taiji Ishimori
  • IWGP Tag Team titles: Knockout Brothers defend against GOA
  • NJPW Strong Openweight title: Tomohiro Ishii defends against Boltin Oleg
  • IWGP Women’s title: Syuri defends against Athena
  • NJPW World TV title: El Phantasmo defends against Konosuke Takeshita

Yota Tsuji renews contract with NJPW

Yota Tsuji will continue his tenure with NJPW.

In a recent post on social media, Tsuji confirmed his contract renewal Tuesday, writing on social media (translated from Japanese), “Yesterday, I signed a contract with New Japan Pro-Wrestling. In this SNS-driven information society, don’t forget to verify the true essence of things for yourself.”

There had been unconfirmed speculation that he was working without a contract.

Tsuji is the reigning IWGP Heavyweight & Global Heavyweight Champion, holding the two title belts simultaneously. Last month at Wrestle Kingdom 20, he defeated Konosuke Takeshita to win the IWGP Heavyweight title and has held the title since then.

He is now scheduled to defend his IWGP Heavyweight title against Jake Lee at NJPW New Beginning Osaka against Jake Lee on Wednesday and will then defend his IWGP Global title at NJPW New Beginning USA 2026.

Yota Tsuji’s first IWGP title challenger confirmed

Jake Lee is officially first in line to challenge Yota Tsuji for the IWGP Championship.

In an angle that took place today, Tsuji finally agreed to defend his IWGP Championship against Lee at New Beginning in Osaka on February 11. The match will be formally announced by NJPW when the full card is revealed in the coming days.

A match between Tsuji and Lee has been building since Wrestle Kingdom 20, when Tsuji was attacked by Lee following his victory over Konosuke Takeshita. Lee returned to NJPW that night when he was unveiled as the newest member of United Empire. Tsuji did not immediately accept Lee’s challenge, instead saying that Lee needed to show why he was worthy of a title shot.

United Empire (Lee, Callum Newman, Great-O-Khan, Francesco Akira & Jakob Austin Young) defeated Unbound Company (Tsuji, Shingo Takagi, Hiromu Takahashi, Taiji Ishimori & Gedo) in a 10-man tag match at today’s Road to New Beginning event. To get the victory, Lee pinned Takagi while the rest of United Empire held Tsuji back and forced him to watch.

After the match, United Empire beat down Unbound Company as they continued to force Tsuji to look on. The champion then agreed to face Lee at New Beginning in Osaka, saying he could not watch United Empire do this to his friends.

Tsuji holds both the IWGP Championship and IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship at the moment. He’s set a clear distinction between the titles, saying the IWGP Championship will be defended in Japan against the best competition NJPW has to offer. The Global title will be defended overseas and in Japan against “invaders” from outside the company.

Edion Arena is hosting the New Beginning in Osaka, with the following matches either official or having been set up:

NJPW New Beginning in Osaka 2026 (Wednesday, February 11) —

  • IWGP Champion Yota Tsuji defends against Jake Lee
  • IWGP Tag Team Champions The Knock Out Brothers (OSKAR & Yuto-Ice) defend against Shota Umino & Yuya Uemura
  • NEVER Openweight Champion Aaron Wolf defends against Ren Narita
  • Global title number one contender’s match: Gabe Kidd vs. Andrade El Idolo (not yet official)

Will 2026 mark NJPW’s return to glory? | Opinion

The following is a column and reflects the opinion of the author and not the website.

In a wintry Tokyo night within the Ota City General Gymnasium, two men stand tall, holding the IWGP Tag Team Championship belts. A towering German named OSKAR paces on a cerulean wrestling mat as he takes his partner’s belt.

This partner, a blonde and a Japanese charisma machine known as Yuto-Ice, addresses the New Japan Pro Wrestling crowd. The native NJPW faithful clamor and cheer. He emphatically preaches to them that NJPW is the best professional wrestling there is and that there’s no “professional wrestling high” like NJPW’s brand of pro wrestling.

The company, the wrestlers, and the fans needed this shot in the arm. Considering this promo came hot off the heels of Wrestle Kingdom 20 and concluded New Year Dash, it instilled hope for 2026. Following the retirement of Hiroshi Tanahashi, this is the mentality that those under the lion’s crest should have: be unabashedly proud of this promotion and do everything in your power to keep it moving forward.

The wrestlers of NJPW are brimming with passion. With that, I’m confident they could steer the ship. But will the booking live up to the hype? I’m cautiously optimistic. I write this as I’m anxiously awaiting New Beginning in Osaka this year. Where will these threads unfurl? It’s exciting and different. Let’s dig into it, shall we?

Yota Tsuji

The newly crowned IWGP Heavyweight Champion defeated then-champion Konosuke Takeshita in the penultimate match of Wrestle Kingdom 20 in a compelling bout. The next night at New Year Dash, he unveiled a different look for the belt, one he’d been keen to follow through with as he brought back the V4 World Heavyweight Championship design and its lineage. A return to normalcy, a symbol of what the company was and should be.

To that end, Tsuji has been militaristic in his vision as the champion and flag-bearer for the promotion as laid out in a January 6 press conference. There, he addressed the future of the IWGP Intercontinental Championship and World Heavyweight Championship. Furthermore, he rejected Jake Lee’s challenge, initiated by his post-match beatdown at Wrestle Kingdom 20, that he’d have to earn a title opportunity.

Lastly, he provided details to his new faction, Unbound Co., and what it means for the Unaffiliated and Bullet Club War Dogs members. His vision is detailed and I recommend reading or listening to it in full.

Shouldering the responsibility of carrying NJPW, Tsuji’s goals for the company are admirable. He understands the weight of what he must do to restore NJPW to relevance, improve its business, and adhere to what made the promotion entertaining in the 2010s. His refreshing perspective highlights the care he has. While not everyone will agree with some of his ideas, he’s prepared to drive NJPW in a reliable direction as champ. 

As a fan, I’m curious about what his leadership as the face of the brand will entail.

United Empire

With the image of the Bullet Club being changed in 2025 and dissolved following Tsuji’s press conference, another heel faction needs to step up. With the vitriolic nature of Callum Newman rising in the latter half of ‘25, that may just well happen. His role in the group has already shown signs of evolution. Following United Empire’s match against Bullet Club War Dogs and Unaffiliated at New Year Dash, Newman and stablemates Great-O-Khan, Jakob Austin Young, Jake Lee, and HENARE were approached by former leader Will Ospreay.

Ospreay, now wrestling for AEW, apologized for his disappearance and wanted to set things right. Fully believing in Newman’s place in the group, Ospreay stated he would return after finishing business in AEW. Newman, visibly holding contempt, almost struck him with a chair behind his back when HENARE and Khan assuaged his ire.

Factoring in that the United Empire hemorrhaged members in previous years, such as Jeff Cobb (aka WWE’s JC Mateo), TJP, Aussie Open (Kyle Fletcher and Mark Davis), and Ospreay himself, Newman’s wrath is understandable.

The inevitable turn against Ospreay is coming. It makes sense with how Newman had to deal with living in the Aerial Assassin’s shadow, how he, Khan, and Young held down the fort, and his frustrations in pursuit of gold. Additionally, the alignment of Jake Lee and Andrade El Idolo bolsters the heelish dynamic, coupled with the nature of the team’s latest performances. I wonder why the longer tenured Khan and HENARE are allowing Newman to step in, but I’m sure that’ll be answered in time.

Furthermore, what will CMLL’s Templario’s place in the group be? Regardless, United Empire is positioned to be the new dominant heel faction. Well, the cool one. I see you, House of Torture.

Aaron Wolf

Speaking of House of Torture and to leader EVIL’s credit, he and Wolf tore it up in the Tokyo Dome. Two matches away from the main event, Wolf’s debut left Tokyo in an uproar. Wearing black trunks and a shaved head, he dominated House of Torture and departed with EVIL’s NEVER Openweight Championship.

Wolf’s judoka and Olympic backgrounds lend much to NJPW’s credibility. To this point, I’m confident his career will start akin to how Jun Akiyama and Kurt Angle had: a new prospect with an established background in combat sports making a damn good first impression. I’ll even go so far as to say that I believe Wolf’s first televised match in the squared circle was better than Ronda Rousey’s at WrestleMania 33, someone who also had a hot start.

Given NJPW’s reputation for training wrestlers, I imagine they tested Wolf so he could run with the best of the roster.

Granted, he is just starting. It’s possible he had a great first night with an EVIL who put on his working boots to deliver a spectacle. They delivered one of the best matches of the event, certainly one of my favorite matches I’ve covered of NJPW. The only and ultimate determinant of this is time itself. Luckily, NJPW is fully behind him, and fans are invested. Will his upcoming match with Ren Narita at New Beginning in Osaka continue his Wrestle Kingdom momentum? Let’s hope so.

Knockout Brothers

I’ve already mentioned that promo from Yuto-Ice. Not only was it what NJPW needed at that exact moment, but it’s also the mentality that any promotion should have. Combined with Tsuji’s press conference, the message is clear: NJPW is de-Westernizing its product. Or, at least, its top stars are attempting to. The Knockout Brothers are the biggest example.

Furthermore, Yuto-Ice confirmed that the Knockout Brothers are staying in NJPW after a report by Self-Made in December that they were offered WWE contracts. Ultimately, sticking to NJPW was their preferred option. In that, Ice and OSKAR share Tsuji’s philosophy of prioritizing NJPW and Japanese pro wrestling fans.

At this point in Japanese history and culture, Japan has been placing more restrictions on Westerners. Whether it’s overtourism or bad tourist behavior, Japan has been combating the influence of toxic Westernism. I can’t honestly say whether this ties into the Knockout Brothers and Tsuji’s approach for NJPW’s future, but I’m reminded of this trend as a result.

Japan is changing, and in this economy, NJPW should change with it. 

The booking

As optimistic as I am for the year to come for the purveying brand of Strong Style, I have some doubts. In recent years, NJPW has made baffling decisions in its booking. Naturally, matches were often good to great, but the company struggled to move the needle forward in ways that would further the product or create new stars.

I spoke to Lyric Swinton of Pro Wrestling Illustrated who echoed this sentiment, specifically regarding Kosei Fujita not winning the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship following his victory in the Best of the Super Juniors finals. To her, this could have revamped the division and shown their faith in his skills—and I agree, he’s been the consistent standout performer of the division in my opinion.

Furthermore, as intense and exciting as the performers in the heavyweight division are, they weren’t represented as well during the G1 Climax 35. In the semifinals, I specifically recall the annoyance of the fandom seeing EVIL defeat Tsuji while appreciating Konosuke Takeshita’s victory over Zack Sabre Jr.

Yet, NJPW has had high moments in 2025. Swinton illustrated to me how the World Tag League featured much creativity in utilizing internal and external teams. She added that it provided a must-watch feel that furthered narratives throughout. We also agreed that Hirooki Goto’s ascent to IWGP World Heavyweight Champion was one of the year’s highest points. It represented the booking by following up on what fans were clamoring for, and that paid off in dividends. While he’s no spring chicken, Goto’s connection to the fans was essential to take advantage of. 

My hopes for 2026

NJPW isn’t the same company it was when Kazuchika Okada, Kenny Omega, Tetsuya Naito, AJ Styles, or Will Ospreay were in it. But it doesn’t have to be. I’m optimistic about that. So long as the booking considers its approach more carefully, it can ride this wave of Japan’s economic turmoil. 

Something that the start of this year has told me thus far is that there are young members of the roster ready to take NJPW to new heights once more. Tsuji and the Knockout Brothers are prime examples. Now that Newman’s personality and commitment have been paying off, he may be the one to snatch the torch from Ospreay in the United Empire. As for Wolf, he’s off to a great start. It’s up to the booking to follow up on that. His match with EVIL is a way to display this strong prospect as a star.

Swinton concluded our talks about other stars, some I hadn’t considered, but make so much sense: Ryohei Oiwa and Kosei Fujita. I join her in that, with the addition of Yuya Uemura for a strong 2026. It’s time the youth movement in the company steps up.

Let this be the year of the lion.

Yota Tsuji announced for NJPW The New Beginning USA

Last weekend, Yota Tsuji won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. Now New Japan Pro Wrestling has announced the new champ’s next appearance in the United States.

Tsuji will be appearing on New Japan’s show at the CURE Insurance Arena in Trenton, New Jersey, entitled “The New Beginning USA” on Friday, February 27. Tickets for the event are already on sale

Tsuji defeated Konosuke Takeshita to win the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship at Wrestle Kingdom on January 4. The next day, at New Year Dash, he revealed the fourth version of the IWGP Heavyweight Championship belt. He is being recognized as the 87th heavyweight champion, the first since Kota Ibushi had unified that belt with the IWGP Intercontinental Championship to form the World Heavyweight Championship at New Japan’s 49th Anniversary Show in March of 2021. 

Tsuji is also still the IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion, having defeated Gabe Kidd for that belt in Osaka last June. 

Tsuji’s last match in North America was a DQ win over Ultimo Guerrero at Fantastica Mania in Mexico City last June. His last match in the United States was at NJPW Strong Style Evolved in Long Beach, California, in December of 2024. Tsuji teamed with Shingo Takagi in a losing effort against Jack Perry and Takeshita on that show. 

NJPW clarifies status of IWGP Championship

NJPW has officially clarified the status of its top title and explained how the lineage of the championship will be handled.

At Wrestle Kingdom 20, Yota Tsuji defeated Konosuke Takeshita to become a double champion — winning the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship and retaining the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship. Tsuji then followed through on his promise to bring back the old fourth-generation design of the IWGP Championship that had been retired in 2021 when the belt was unified with the Intercontinental title.

The fan-favorite classic belt design will be sticking around with NJPW officially bringing back the IWGP Championship to replace the newer World Heavyweight title belt. The IWGP Championship and IWGP World Heavyweight Championship lineages have been merged with Tsuji recognized as the 87th champion.

“Now that the (world and heavyweight) lineages are connected, I expect you to lead NJPW into a new world with the title,” NJPW President Hiroshi Tanahashi said to Tsuji at a press conference.

The Intercontinental title remains retired with double champion Tsuji holding the IWGP Championship and IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship. Tsuji announced that his two titles will be defended separately and will have different purposes. The IWGP Championship will be defended in Japan against the best that NJPW has to offer. As for the Global title, it will be defended internationally or in Japan against “invaders” from other promotions.

Jake Lee has stepped up as the first challenger for Tsuji’s IWGP Championship, though Tsuji said at the press conference that he is not accepting Lee’s challenge just yet.

“He needs to convince me and the people of why he joined United Empire and why he deserves the chance,” Tsuji said.

Gabe Kidd and Andrade El Idolo have put themselves in Global title contention with the two likely set for a number one contender’s match at the New Beginning.

Following his victory at Wrestle Kingdom, Tsuji announced the formation of a new faction at New Year Dash. The faction is named “Unbound Company” and includes Tsuji, Hiromu Takahashi, Shingo Takagi, and the members of Bullet Club War Dogs.

Fight Game: Saying goodbye to Hiroshi Tanahashi

John LaRocca and Garrett Gonzales return with a brand-new Fight Game to discuss some of the most interesting topics in pro wrestling.

We gave out our thumbs up and thumbs down for the week before focusing on this past weekend’s Wrestle Kingdom 20.

We talked about Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Kazuchika Okada being near perfect, the poetry of the book-end feud, Yota Tsuji beating Konosuke Takeshita, and the debut of Aaron Wolf.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)