NJPW Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall results: Zack Sabre Jr. pulls out slick counter to retain against Jeff Cobb

See how Zack Sabre Jr. was able to hold off a title challenge from Jeff Cobb at NJPW Dominion.

The English announce team notes that Zack Sabre Jr. has been keeping a busy schedule lately, including defending this title against Action Andretti earlier this week on AEW Rampage. Of course, none of his challengers are the size of Jeff Cobb. They get right in each other’s faces and start jawing before the bell.

Cobb fires out of his corner when the match begins, but the champ is able to stand his ground with a series of kicks. A jumping shoulder block changes that, but Sabre reverses a Tour of the Island attempt and grabs Cobb’s arm.

The challengers gets a couple of two counts, then pushes Sabre off him at one following a dropkick to the back of the head. This is a furious pace so far, undoubtedly because of the 15-minute time limit.

Cobb’s forearm shots are answered in kind, but Jeff simply hits much harder. ZSJ waves Cobb in for more and is sent back down to the canvas. A backdrop sees Cobb crawl over for another cover, but ZSJ kicks out at two.

Sabre finally gets a chance to really stretch Cobb for the first time, switching from limb to limb as only he does. It takes all of Cobb’s strength to roll his foe off of him, but those holds took their toll.

Cobb picks up momentum, slinging Sabre into the corner pads repeatedly. ZSJ is able to grab a sleeper but takes an electric chair drop that leaves both men slow to rise from the mat.

Sabre goes back to work on Cobb’s arm and shows his strength with a suplex, then a penalty kick that leads to several unsuccessful covers. Cobb fires back with an overhead release suplez and nearly wins with a bridging pin combination that gets the crowd to react.

After hitting a Spin Cycle, Sabre is suplexed yet again. Cobb tries for the Tour of the Islands, but ZSJ counters with a crucifix rollup and manages to keep Cobb’s shoulders down for three.

Click here for full NJPW Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall results.

Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall results: Sanada holds off intriguing challenger, Bullet Club grows

Check out all of the action for NJPW’s start of the summer card with full Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall results.

Is there change in the air? It’s always possible when eight championships are on the line on one pro wrestling card, which is the case for NJPW Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall.

Except for one eight-man tag and one match to determine a No. 1 contender for the IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship — and even that bout is intriguing considering the man holding that particular title is Kenny Omega — every bout on this year’s card is a championship match.

With that much gold on the line, it’s tricky to pick the showdowns that stand out from the rest, but three figure to be measuring sticks for whether things will be shaken up across New Japan this summer. The first sees David Finlay, leader of the Bullet Club, take on former teammate El Phantasmo for Finlay’s NEVER Openweight Championship. Will this be a measure of revenge for ELP after he was unceremoniously booted from the group, or further validation of Finlay’s new direction for one of pro wrestling’s most famous stables?

Hiromu Takahashi defends his IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Master Wato, who made quite the impression by winning the 2023 Best of the Super Juniors tournament. A victory over Hiromu would give him the right to claim he’s the best junior heavyweight in the company.

And in the main event, Sanada will attempt to fend off a challenge to his IWGP World Heavyweight Championship from Yota Tsuji. While Sanada had to break free from Los Ingobernables de Japon  to take his game to the next level, Tsuji is attempting to do just the opposite, saying he wants to join LIJ while trying to bring home the top prize in NJPW.

It should be an exciting night with a title change or two and perhaps a couple of surprises before it’s all said and done, not to mention the reveal of the G1 Climax 33 lineups.

Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall results:

(click on any match with a link for full details)

  • Will Ospreay def. Lance Archer by pinfall to become No. 1 contender for Kenny Omega’s IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship
  • Ospreay gets on the microphone and says he’s out for revenge on Omega, and will walk into Canada to bring the title back … likely meaning at Forbidden Door in Toronto
  • Los Ingobernables de Japon (Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi, Bushi and Titán) def. Just 5 Guys (Taichi, Douki, Yoshinobu Kanemaru and Taka Michinoku) by submission
  • Catch 2/2 (Francesco Akira and TJP) def. Intergalactic Jet Setters (Kushida and Kevin Knight) by pinfall to become the new IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions …
  • … but the new champs are attacked right after the match by Dan Moloney, who cornered them during the bout, and Clark Connors
  • Zack Sabre Jr. def. Jeff Cobb by pinfall to retain the NJPW World Television Championship
  • Bishamon (Hirooki Goto and Yoshi-Hashi) def. House of Torture (Evil and Yujiro Takahashi) and United Empire (Great-O-Khan and Aaron Henare) by pinfall to become the new IWGP Tag Team Champions and Strong Openweight Tag Team Champions …
  • … but after their victory, they are laid out by the new Bullet Club War Dogs, Alex Coughlin and Gabriel Kidd
  • The G1 Climax 33 field will include Kazuchika Okada, Naito, Sanada, Ospreay, Hiroshi Tanahashi, David Finlay, Shota Umino, Takagi, Tomohiro Ishii, Tama Tonga, Tanga Loa, Hikuleo, Goto, Yoshi-Hashi, Toru Yano, Kenta, ZSJ, Taichi, Eddie Kingston, El Phantasmo, Ren Narita, Evil, Chase Owens, Cobb, Great-O-Khan, Henare, Kidd, Coughlin, Shane Haste, Mikey Nicholls, Yota Tsuji, and Kaito Kiyomiya
  • David Finlay def. El Phantasmo by pinfall to retain the NEVER Openweight Championship
  • Hiromu Takahashi def. Master Wato by pinfall to retain the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship
  • Chaos (Kazuchika Okada and Tomohiro Ishii) and Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Blackpool Combat Club (Jon Moxley and Claudio Castagnoli) and Shota Umino by pinfall, with Okada accepting a recorded challenge from Bryan Danielson after the match and suggesting “the Forbidden Door will be opened”
  • Sanada def. Yota Tsuji by pinfall to retain the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship

Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall: Date, start time, how to watch

Everything you need to know to tune in for NJPW Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall this weekend.

A NJPW summer doesn’t get started in earnest until Dominion arrives. That happens this weekend, as Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall becomes the 15th show to bear the Dominion name and the ninth at the venue in its title.

As always, there are championship matches aplenty. Of the nine bouts on the card (there’s also one non-televised match to kick things off for the live crowd), there is gold at stake in seven of them, plus a No. 1 contender match for an eighth title.

The main event will be a test of the star power of two men who haven’t spent much time in these kinds of spots to date. IWGP World  Heavyweight Champion Sanada is set to take on Yota Tsuji, who only just returned to the company from his overseas excursion at Wrestling Dontaku 2023 last month. Will fans take to them as top of the card talent?

AEW fans might want to check out Dominion as well, since several matches figure to play into the dual-branded Forbidden Door event later this month. Lance Archer and Will Ospreay will face off for the right to challenge for the IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship, a title that just happens to be held by Kenny Omega. It’s also worth noting that Omega was said to be out of the company but “not in Canada,” meaning he could make an in-person appearance.

The NEVER Openweight 6-Man Tag Team Championship is also intriguing, as champions Kazuchika Okada, Tomohiro Ishii and Hiroshi Tanahashi battle Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli and Shota Umino. This is the kind of matchup that could easily be run back at Forbidden Door, though Mox has also seemingly been campaigning for a one-on-one match with Okada …

The action all goes down late Saturday night/early Sunday morning, depending where you are in the U.S. Here’s everything you need to know to watch Dominion.

Dominion 6.4 in Osaka-jo Hall

  • Date: Saturday, June 4, 2023
  • Location: Osaka-jō Hall, Osaka, Japan
  • Start time: 3:00 a.m. ET/midnight PT/4:00 p.m. JST
  • How to watch: On NJPW World (subscription required) in Japanese or English

MJF thinks ‘New Japan Pro-Wrestling sucks,’ except for 1 wrestler

MJF is getting an early start on having NJPW fans boo him ahead of Forbidden Door.

It’s fair to say that most of the AEW roster and its fans are excited to see the company join forces for the second annual edition of Forbidden Door next month in Toronto. It’s equally fair to say that MJF doesn’t share that sentiment.

After escaping the Four Pillars match at Double or Nothing this weekend still in possession of his precious Triple B (known to the rest of us as the AEW World Championship), MJF was asked during the media scrum if he was looking forward to wrestling at Forbidden Door.

Not exactly.

“Do I have to wrestle at Forbidden Door?” MJF said. “F–k that! Oh god, it’s a f–king indie fed. …

“With all due  respect, their greatest legend probably couldn’t lace my boots. I think I would make anyone on that roster look silly, and I don’t want to waste my time.”

Though his disdain was apparent, MJF did name one, perhaps surprising, NJPW wrestler he enjoyed watching.

“I think New Japan Pro-Wrestling sucks, except that Great-O-Khan guy,” he said. “He pops me. I like him.”

Why Great-O-Khan? Like so many things MJF, only the champ himself knows for sure. Check out his entire press conference time below, with video courtesy of Denise Salcedo.

MJF didn’t have to participate in the first ever Forbidden Door last year, falling as it did during the time between Double or Nothing and All Out when he was not actively wrestling. Alas, as the AEW World Championship will almost certainly be defended on this year’s show (as it was in 2022), meaning that like it or not, he’ll be on the card.

Maybe he’ll even get to wrestle Great-O-Khan. We’ll find out for sure over the next few weeks.

NJPW issues statement on Mercedes Moné injury, wishes her fast recovery

NJPW confirmed that Mercedes Moné injured her right ankle over the weekend.

New Japan Pro-Wrestling today issued a short statement confirming that Mercedes Moné was injured in the main event of NJPW Resurgence in Long Beach over the weekend.

NJPW confirmed that Moné injured her right ankle and wished her the best in her recovery.

Moné underwent a thorough appraisal of her injury immediately after her match and began treatment.

New Japan Pro-Wrestling joins fans in wishing Moné a full and fast recovery.

Moné was facing Willow Nightingale in the finals of a tournament to determine the inaugural NJPW Strong Women’s Champion, having already defeated Stephanie Vaquer. Nightingale got by Momo Kohgo before pinning Moné to win the title.

Reports on the night of the show suggested Moné suffered a broken ankle; while she didn’t discuss the nature of the injury, the wrestler herself hinted at missing some time while recovering in a social media post later that night.

The setback puts Moné’s wrestling future a bit more up in the air for the time being. She has worked exclusively for NJPW and sister promotion Stardom in 2023 to date, but had reportedly agreed to extend her time with them only through Resurgence. It could be several months until the wrestling world sees where the former Sasha Banks shows up next.

Mercedes Moné confirms injury suffered at NJPW Resurgence

Mercedes Moné tweeted that she’d “heal and be back better than ever.”

Wrestling fans anxiously waiting to see where Mercedes Moné will pop up next may have to be patient for longer than expected.

Reports began circulating Sunday night that Moné was injured during her main event match at NJPW Resurgence against Willow Nightingale, with PW Insider saying that the word backstage was that she suffered a broken ankle.

While she didn’t confirm that diagnosis, she did take to Twitter to confirm she was injured, saying that she was “gonna heal and be back better than ever.”

It’s certainly a bummer for Moné, who had embraced her life after WWE, where she shot to stardom as Sasha Banks before famously walking out on the company last year. Her work with NJPW was well received, and she enjoyed a brief run as IWGP Women’s Champion before dropping the title to Mayu Iwatani at a Stardom event in April.

Though there was speculation that would be her last appearance for NJPW/Stardom, Moné agreed to extend her time with those promotions at least through Resurgence, which took place in Long Beach and was heavily marketed around her participation.

Moné had made it known that she intended on making this the “world tour” portion of her wrestling career, and AEW fans had grown excited over the thought that she might show up for one of that company’s upcoming shows — either Forbidden Door with NJPW in Toronto, or All In London. All of that will have to wait, however, as she recuperates from her injury.

Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results: Hiromu Takahashi gives his all but can’t dethrone Sanada

Both Hiromu and Sanada had their supporters inFukuoka.

Just 5 Guys are all out to support Sanada during his entrance as Kevin Kelly discusses how many things have changed for the champion in a short period of time. LIJ is also out at ringside to support Hiromu Takahashi, something they haven’t always been great about doing for each other in the past.

There are loud chants for Hiromu as the opening bell rings and they lock up for the first time. There’s a clean break along the ropes but Hiromu tries to rush the champ and comes up empty. Sanada grabs a side headlock and takes things to the mat, where the challenger wraps his legs around the champ’s head and forces a rope break.

Both men run the ropes until Hiromu low bridges his former teammate to the apron and dropkicks him to the floor. Hiromu lands his dropkick off the apron as well, blasting Sanada over the guardrail before launching himself over the rail to land another dropkick, taking his own nasty back bump on the concrete to do it.

Back into the ring they go, but only long enough for Sanada to send Hiromu back to the outside. Sanada DDTs his foe on the floor, which the English announce team calls evidence of the “Just 5 Guys Sanada” that he hasn’t been showing much of during this tour, saving it for this match.

Sanada pounds away on Hiromu, looking like he’s seized all the momentum while he works on the challenger’s neck. Hiromu tries to fight back with chops but eats a suplex and has to kick out at two.

The other members of LIJ try to get the fans back into it, and Hiromu makes another push forward only to get smacked back harder than he’s hitting. A hurricanrana finally buys Takahashi a moment to compose himself, bringing the crowd to his aid a bit.

A flurry of offense includes a shotgun dropkick, and he’s able to cover but doesn’t come close to keeping Sanada down for three. A falcon arrow follows, leading to a more convincing two count.

Two impressive leapfrogs are followed by a dropkick and then a plancha to the floor by the world champion. He asks for noise from the crowd and hears some cheers of his own, and he rolls Hiromu back into the ring for a somewhat haphazard near fall.

A short exchange of counters ends with Hiromu’s inside cradle for two, and he pulls off a DDT right after that but can’t capitalize. Sanada is lifted and smashes into the corner pad, and the challenger jumps into a combination leg triangle and armbreaker. Sanada powers out and eventually hits a TKO for another near fall.

Sanada signals to the camera for the finish, dropping back into Skull End. Hiromu is bent back pretty far, and the fans chant to encourage him to find a way out. He finally frees himself only to have Sanada spin him around by the neck. The champ hits a moonsault, but Hiromu gets his knees up on a second attempt.

With the help of the ropes, Hiromu gets Sanada up for a Time Bomb, but Sanada kicks out at two. Both men run the ropes again, but it’s Takahashi who strikes with a lariat. Sanada evades a Time Bomb 2 and hits a shining wizard, but the challenger counters Deadfall with a German suplex.

Hiromu tries for a running lariat but finds it has no effect. Sanada connects on several uppercuts, knocking his foe into the ropes and staggering him on his feet. Takahashi looks like he’s got nothing left even though he keeps coming forward.

Somehow, Hiromu finds the energy for a cutter out of the corner, and he hits Time Bomb 2 for a very close two count. The crowd thought he had it.

Hiromu tries to get the champ up again, but Sanada kicks his way free only to see the challenger block his shining wizard. A reversal off the ropes leads to Sanada going for and applying Skull End again. Can Hiromu possibly escape a second time?

It appears he’s fading in the hold, even as the fans keep chanting for him. Sanads realizes there’s no tap coming, so he delivers another moonsault, looking incredulous as Hiromu kicks out again. Sanada wants Deadfall but is countered with a rollup.

Undeterred, Sanada strikes with a shining wizard and finally hits Deadfall, and that’s enough to put Hiromu away.

After the match, Sanada says they wrestled once before, 11 years ago, but have grown so much since then and will undoubtedly have more growth to do going forward. He thanks the fans for selling out the arena and says next time they return, Just 5 Guys will be even better.

But before he can leave the ring, the Godzilla-esque video that’s been running for weeks pays off with the return of Yota Tsuji, who clears the ring, spears Sanada and briefly holds up the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship before laying it back over the champ’s chest.

Click here for full NJPW Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results.

Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results: David Finlay brutalizes Tama Tonga, wins NEVER Openweight Championship

Jado nearly threw in the towel for Tama Tonga during the match.

Tama Tonga wastes no time during his ring entrance, walking rapidly to the ring but getting hauled down by David Finlay before his introduction is even finished. We’re off and running, with Tonga clotheslining Finlay to the floor before he even takes his title belt off.

The brawl on the outside goes badly for the champ, who gets speared through part of the barricade to take the battle into the crowd. Fans are cautioned to stay out of the way as Tonga is hurled into a row of mostly empty chairs.

Finlay rains down right hands and keeps pressing his advantage as the ref’s 20 count keeps going. Tonga is still pretty far out in the crowd, but he makes it back into the ring at 18. Finlay hits a suplex for a near fall, then bites the side of Tama’s head.

After taking a moment to admonish Red Shoes, Finlay unleashes a nasty Irish whip into the corner, then another into the opposite corner. The announcers discuss Gedo and Jado being in opposite corners, looking on.

Tama battles back to his feet and fires himself up to withstand more strikes. He finally hits a head and shoulders suplex to buy himself a bit of a breather, and a big clothesline sends him tumbling to the floor after his challenger.

Now it’s Finlay’s turn to taste the metal of the barricades, three times in a row, then even more until he’s slumped down on the floor. The ref has to start counting again, though they’re back in by eight.

Finlay begs off in the corner, but Tonga comes straight at him. A clothesline out of the corner has Tama taking off his jacket and clapping to get the crowd into it. His corner splash and SRC set up the Supreme Flow, but Finlay gets both knees up.

Both men are content to stand and trade, with Finlay emerging on top after a pair of Irish Curses, and he covers for a two count. Finlay repeatedly hammers the champ with shots from behind, picking him up off the mat each time for more. He connects on a sliding elbow from behind, saying “just that easy” to the camera.

Finlay tries to hoist the champ, who counters into the Tongan Twist. Tama calls for Bloody Sunday but is driven back into the red corner. Tonga hits Bloody Sunday and hooks the leg but gets only two again.

The fans clap as Tama pounds the mat, but Finlay is ready and a series of counters and reversals breaks out. Tonga finally tries for and gets a Sharpshooter applied. Finlay sells the agony well as he crawls toward the ropes, but he’s pulled back into the center of the ring.

Finlay finally gets a break but is still in trouble, trying in vain to prevent Tama from going up top. He decides to try joining him instead, even shrugging off a headbutt to shove Tonga off the top and all the way to the floor. Finlay powerbombs Tonga on the apron and seemingly hopes for the countout again.

But he heads back out when the count is at 10, hurling Tama into the ringpost head first. The ref counts again, making it to 19 before Tonga slips back in. Finlay is waiting with a Dominator that earns another near fall.

The match passes the 20-minute mark as the ref checks to see if Tama is out. He’s not, but he gets slammed back to the mat and powerbombed twice. Finlay covers but sees the champ kick out at two.

Finlay wants Tonga to beg him for mercy, then slams his head into the mat and shoves Red Shoes so he can deliver more punishment. There’s a third powerbomb, with Finlay telling Ref Shoes to check on Tama. Jado has a white towel ready but waves his arms to signify he won’t throw it in.

That’s fine with Finlay, who hits Oblivion but then pulls up on the cover at two. A second Oblivion leads to the same thing, with Finlay intentionally pulling up at two. A third Oblivion ends it, and Finlay is the new NEVER Openweight Champion in vicious fashion.

He might have his first challenger already too: A masked figure approaches the ring and attacks Finlay after the match, revealing itself to be El Phantasmo. The two men brawl until they are eventually pulled apart.

Click here for full Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results.

Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results: Okada, Ishii, Tanahashi take down Strong Style, claim 6-man gold

Could Strong Style retain the NEVER Openweight 6-Man Tag Team Championship against a star-studded team of challengers?

The English commentary team notes that much of this has to do with the beef between Ren Narita and Kzuchika Okada. There’s a question about whether the Chaos + Tanahashi team will coexist, though the champions are an unlikely trio in their own right. Kevin Kelly also notes that Tanahashi is just returning from a rib injury but looks good, and he starts out against Minoru Suzuki.

The two veterans work to a standstill on the mat before Desperado tags in. The masked man continues Suzuki’s work on the Ace’s left arm, something Narita is happy to do as well, knocking both of Tanahashi’s teammates off the apron as he goes.

Tanahashi tags in Okada for the first time, and he shows his temper immediately as he battles to the floor with Narita. Ren takes a body slam on the floor and gets tossed back into the ring.

Okada locks in the Money Clip but gets bum rushed by Narita’s teammates, and suddenly all six men are brawling. The champs get the best of that and go to work on Ishii, who finally has enough and dishes out shoulder tackles. Okada and Narita finally get the ring to themselves, with Okada scoring a two count with a DDT.

Tanahashi tags in and trades strikes with Narita before taking a Sling Blade that leaves both men down. Suzuki returns and pounds Tanahashi to the mat in the corner, then again before smacking Okada as well. A running kick to the face connects, but Tanahashi launches a rally that ends with a jumping forearm shot.

A body slam has Tanahashi going up top, but Suzuki rolls away and motions his foe in. Here come the forearm shots, bringing up memories of their past classics. A mean body shot crumples Tanahashi as Suzuki looks to take advantage of his foe’s weakness with an abdominal stretch.

Ishii finally saves Tanahashi though he’s not thrilled about having to do it. The Ace buys some time with dragon screws and tags in Ishii, who has no time for Deperado’s strikes and suplexes him. The masked man answers with an impressive suplex, then taunts the Stone Pitbull until he shoots to his feet.

Desperado pulls off another suplex and looks fired up, but the return of Okada and Narita put an end to that. After a chaotic sequence, Desperado hits a spinebuster and Tanahashi accidentally slaps Ishii. Desperado tries for a rollup but only get a two count.

A spear by Desperado leads to Guitarra de Angel, but Okada breaks up the pin. Desperado is still feeling it, but a headbutt from Ishii leaves both men flat on their backs.

Fittingly, Narita and Okada both tag back in, with Narita flinging the ref away as he tries to simply bash his way past the Rainmaker in and out of the ring. Okada eats the barricade twice on the outside during the rampage and is thrown back inside.

A fisherman’s suplex leads to a near fall by Narita, who switches to an attempt at a rear naked choke. He tries for an abdominal strtech but gets hip tossed and has to reply with a jumping back elbow.

Strong Styles takes turns charging Okada in the corner, who takes another suplex from Narita but kicks out again at two. There’s another one too before Narita locks in a submission and Ishii needs to hustle to break it up.

Okada’s spinning lariat is countered, but Tanahashi returns for a Sling Blade and suddenly the challengers have Narita in trouble, three-on-one style. A nasty neckbreaker by Okada forces saves from both of Narita’s temmates.

A signature Okada dropkick scores, leading to a Landslide and the Rainmaker. Okada covers and gets the three, giving the Rainmaker a championship he’s never won.

After the match, Shota Umino comes to the ring to say that if he wants to create a new paradigm, he needs to take out Okada. He’ll even get help from someone who hasn’t been in New Japan for a while: Jon Moxley, who says he’ll return at Dominion.

Okada mocks Umino for calling on his “babysitter” and offers an f-bomb as his last word.

Click here for full Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results.

Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results: Sanada holds off Hiromu, faces new threat to end the show

The final five matches on the Wrestling Dontaku 2023 card are title bouts.

Sanada finally ascended to the top of the mountain in New Japan Pro-Wrestling, winning the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship for the first time last month. Now one of his former mates from his LIJ days wants to make his reign a short one.

IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion Hiromu Takahashi will be the first challenger for Sanada when the two meet tonight in the main event of Wrestling Dontaku 2023 in Fukuoka. The always colorful Hiromu will be attempting to also win the top prize in NJPW for the first time, making hima  double champ if he pulls it off.

That’s not the only title on the line. In fact the last five matches on this card are championship bouts, with the Strong Openweight Championship and NJPW World Television Championship among those being defended. Two others stand out, however; one pits former longtime Bullet Club member Tama Tonga against the group’s latest leader, David Finlay, looking to claim Tonga’s NEVER Openweight Championship and validate his status as BC’s top dog.

The other is a titanic battle for the NEVER Openweight 6-Man Tag Team Championship. Reigning champs Strong Style (Minoru Suzuki, El Desperado and Ren Narita) will try to turn back a challenge from a star-studded trio composed of Kazuchika Okada, Tomohiro Ishii and Hiroshi Tanahashi.

The opening matches on the card are a mix of six-man and eight-man tag matches that ensure as many different members of the NJPW roster as possible are in the show. It should be an exciting night of wrestling from the Fukuoka Kokusai Center, and it kicks off at 5 a.m. ET/2 a.m. PT.

Wrestling Dontaku 2023 results:

(click on any match with a link for more details)

  • Chaos (Toru Yano, Yoh and Bishamon (Hirooki Goto and Yoshi-Hashi)) def. House of Torture (Evil, Yujiro Takahashi, Sho and Dick Togo) by pinfall, after which Aussie Open came out to repossess their tag team title belts and propose a three-way match with Bishamon and House of Torture
  • United Empire (Aussie Open (Mark Davis and Kyle Fletcher) and Great-O-Khan) def. TMDK (Mikey Nicholls, Shane Haste and Kosei Fujita) by submission as Great-O-Khan taps out Fujita; afterward Great-O-Khan cuts a promo saying neither Bishamon or House of Torture stand a chance against Aussie Open and that Jeff Cobb would defeat Zack Sabre Jr. later tonight
  • Shota Umino and The Jet Setters (Kushida and Kevin Knight) def. United Empire (Aaron Henare and Catch 2/2 (Francesco Akira and TJP)) by pinfall when Kushida catches TJP with an inside cradle
  •  Just 5 Guys (Taichi, Yoshinobu Kanemaru and Douki) def. Los Ingobernables de Japon (Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi and Bushi) by submission as Taichi gets Bushi to submit
  • A video plays to promote Best of the Super Juniors and show off the cards for May 12-24
  • Hikuleo def. KENTA by pinfall to become the new Strong Openweight Champion
  • Jeff Cobb vs. Zack Sabre Jr. ends in a 15-minute time limit draw; Sabre retains the NJPW World Television Championship
  • Chaos (Kazuchika Okada and Tomohiro Ishii) and Hiroshi Tanahashi def. Strong Style (Minoru Suzuki, El Desperado and Ren Narita) by pinfall to become the new NEVER Openweight 6-Man Tag Team Champions
  • Shota Umino reveals that Jon Moxley is returning at Dominion in June
  • David Finlay def. Tama Tonga by pinfall to become the new NEVER Openweight Champion …
  • .. but gets attacked by El Phantasmo after the match, and the two men need to eventually be pulled apart
  • Sanada def. Hiromu Takahashi by pinfall to retain the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship
  • The Godzilla-esque video promo that’s been running for weeks pays off with a reveal of a returning Yota Tsuji, who clears the ring, spears Sanada and holds up the IWGP title before laying it back across Sanada’s chest