Tag: Wrestling

  • PROGRESS Chapter 193: PROGRESS Las Vegas II Full Card

    The Collective week kicks off today through Saturday with 13 shows across four days. One of the shows scheduled for The Collective is PROGRESS Wrestling’s Chapter 193. PROGRESS Chapter 193 is live from the Horseshoe Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada on Thursday, April 16 at 11AM Local, 2PM ET.

    The event is headlined by a PROGRESS World Championship Match between Man Like DeReiss and Michael Oku. Also on the card, Paul Hauser goes up against Big Damo and much more. You can see the full card for the event below.

    • Mercedes Martinez vs. Renee Michelle vs. Lena Kross vs. Emersyn Jayne
    • Danny Jones vs. Simon Miller
    • Super Strong Style 16 Mens Tournament 2026 First Round Match: Lio Rush vs. Ethan Allen
    • Super Strong Style 16 Women’s Tournament 2026 First Round Match: Rhio vs. Vert Vixen
    • Kuro & Tommy Tanner vs. Subculture (Flash Morgan Webster & Mark Andrews)
    • PROGRESS Proteus Title Match: Paul Walter Hauser (c) vs. Big Damo
    • PROGRESS World Title Match: Man Like DeReiss (c) vs. Michael Oku

    Again, this event kicks off at 11AM local, 2PM ET on Thursday, April 16 and will be streamed on TrillerTV+. You can subscribe to TrillerTV+ to watch all of The Collective events.

  • NJPW Death Vegas Invitational Line Up So Far

    NJPW Death Vegas Invitational Line Up So Far

    NJPW Death Vegas Invitational is apart of The Collective 2026.

    The Collective will span 13 shows across 4 days and it all kicks off on Wednesday, April 15 live at The Horseshoe Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada as apart of WrestleMania week. This  event is slotted for Thursday, April 16. Several names were announced for the event, but don’t have matches as of this writing, such as Zack Sabre Jr. As of now, we don’t have the entire full card but you can see the lineup so far, below.

    Here is the NJPW Death Vegas Invitational line up so far 

    Tag Team House Rules Hardcore Match
    Daisuke Sasaki & Gedo vs. Gringo Loco & Joey Janela

    Triple Threat Tag Team Match
    Bustah & The Brain (Jordan Oliver & Alec Price) vs. MxM Collection (Mason Madden & Mansoor) vs. Kushida & Yamato

    Triple Threat Hardcore Match
    Jimmy Lloyd vs. Ishin vs. Effy

    Tag Team High Stakes Heartbreak Jackpot Match
    Starlight Kid & Dragon Kid vs. El Phantasmo & TBD (Was supposed to Maki Itoh but due to visa issues Itoh had to withdrawn)

    Triple Threat Tag Team Love & Peace Death Match
    El Desperado & Jun Kasai vs. Rina Yamashita & Masashi Takeda vs. Matt Tremont & Nick Gage

    The show starts at 8pm pacific time, 11pm ET on Thursday, April 16 will be streamed on New Japan World & TrillerTV+. You can subscribe to TrillerTV+ to watch all of The Collective events.

  • Hybrid X PWU: Midnight Xpress Full Card And Info

    Hybrid X PWU: Midnight Xpress Full Card And Info

    Hybrid Wrestling in conjunction with Pro Wrestling UnPlugged, are coming to The Collective this week and will help kick off a hot couple days of independent wrestling shows. On Wednesday, April 15, “Midnight Xpress” goes down from the Horseshoe Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada with some wild matches on the card.

    Jack Evans is back in action as he challenges Pat Dynamite for the PWU World Championship. Plus, Mercedes Martinez battles Priscilla Kelly, Matt Tremont takes on the legendary Gangrel and so much more. You can see the full card below.

    • No Escape Street Fight: Big Rel vs. Rich Po
    • PCO vs. 1 Called Manders
    • Jazmin Allure vs. Mia Friday vs. Ruthie Jay vs. Brittnie Brooks
    • Skywalker Scramble Match: Mickie Knuckles vs. Lucky 13 vs. Tarzan Duran vs. Deklan Grant
    • Gangrel vs. Matt Tremont
    • BLK OUT (JGeorge, Robby Illuminati & Ruckus) vs. VNDL48 (Atticus Cogar, Christian Napier & Otis Cogar)
    • Effy & Joey Janela vs. Bustah And The Brain (Alec Price & Jordan Oliver) vs. The BackSeat Boyz (JP Grayson & Tommy Grayson)
    • PWU World Title Match: Pat Dynamite (c) vs. Jack Evans

    The event kicks off at 11:59PM local, 2:59AM ET on Wednesday, April 15 / Thursday, April 16 and will be streamed on TrillerTV+. You can subscribe to TrillerTV+ to watch all of The Collective events.

     

  • Club WWE Gold Membership Experience Announced

    Club WWE Gold Membership Experience Announced

    Club WWE is (almost) here. For weeks, WWE has been teasing Club WWE, and we finally know what it’s all about.

    Today, WWE sent out a press release revealing the gold membership experience for fans and revealing the details surrounding what Club WWE entails and the involvement of John Cena. You can read the full press release below.

    Club WWE Membership

    WWE® ANNOUNCES ‘CLUB WWE’ – GOLD MEMBERSHIP EXPERIENCE FOR FANS

    Fans Can Sign Up Now To Become Founding Members By Visiting WWE.com/ClubWWE

    April 14, 2026 – WWE today announced the launch of Club WWE, the ultimate insider membership program designed to bring fans closer to WWE than ever before through exclusive access, rewards and experiences.

    Club WWE will serve as a dedicated destination for WWE fans offering a wide host of benefits across ticketing, merchandise, community and content – all in one place. Fans interested in becoming a Founding Member can join the waitlist now by visiting WWE.com/ClubWWE.

    For an annual membership fee, Club WWE gold members will unlock a range of premium benefits including:

    • Exclusive 24-hour ticket presale access to all WWE events around the world and tailored perks at featured events including Superstar meet-and-greets, hospitality opportunities and entrances.
    • Members-only WWE Shop featuring exclusive collections and early access to merchandise drops like John Cena’s upcoming Never Seen 17 collection.
    • Bonus WWE content featuring inside scoops, extended cuts, behind-the-scenes footage, and more.
    • Dedicated members-only community forum connecting fans around the world like never before.
    • Points-based rewards system allowing fans to earn credits to redeem against digital and physical goods.
    • Premium Welcome Pack for Founding Members.

    “Our fans are the heartbeat of WWE, and everything we do begins with them,” said 17-time WWE Champion John Cena. “Club WWE is about bringing that connection to life in a bigger way – through exclusive access, unique experiences and a true sense of community. It’s a premium destination built to reward passion and give our most dedicated fans a meaningful way to engage with WWE all year round.”

    More details including full Club WWE membership benefits and launch timings will be announced in the coming weeks. For further information visit WWE.com/ClubWWE.

    John Cena also took to social media to speak about his involvement in Club WWE, saying he’s working to make Club WWE an experience like no other.

    https://x.com/johncena/status/2044105184952103389?s=46

    You can sign up now at WWE.com/ClubWWE. Stay tuned for more information as it’s available.

  • East of Eden: Bret Hart vs Owen Hart at WrestleMania X

    East of Eden: Bret Hart vs Owen Hart at WrestleMania X

    Have you ever heard the story of “Right Hand, Left Hand”? The eternal story of good and evil? Keep reading, and I’ll tell you. On each knuckle, a word is tattooed. H-A-T-E, and it was with this left hand that Cain dropped his brother Abel down for the 3-count. L-O-V-E, the right hand, the hand of love. This is the story of life, wrestling fans. Each finger, intertwined in a war within the squared circle. Old Left Hand, it swings, hitting Right Hand against the turnbuckle as it slides and slumps in the corner. Lefty could pull him in for the pinfall here, folks. But no, just a minute; Right is back on its feet, love’s fighting back. It hits, and it hits, and it hits. Right Hand delivers its hook, and Left is down for the count. Yessirree folks, Right Hand has won, love wins in the end. This is the story of Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X.

     

    The saga of Bret and Owen Hart is a storied one. Parts of a dynasty, performers forged in father Stu Hart’s infamous Hart Dungeon. The place where such tortures would only let screams escape. Canada’s Hart family prided itself on the wrestling business. While not all of its lineage made it to great heights, if any, none quite reached the levels of the dark-haired Bret and the blonde Owen. 

     

    Bret had been with the company since 1984. He’d enjoyed many largely applauded rivalries, like Mr. Perfect, Razor Ramon, and Ric Flair. In the latter years of his career, his feuds with Shawn Michaels and “Stone Cold” Steve Austin further ensured his place in history that future generations of wrestling fans can revisit.

     

    Owen briefly stayed from 1988 to 1989 before taking trips to Stu’s Stampede Wrestling while performing in New Japan Pro Wrestling and World Championship Wrestling, sometimes under a blue mask. As of 1991, he’d been in Bret’s corner until the 1993 Survivor Series, wherein he’d begin clashing with his brother.

     

    Emerald with envy, he had mounting frustrations. To Owen, Bret was a glory hog. Always in the spotlight, almost effortlessly so. The crowd took to Bret, the cameras took to Bret, and only the shadows welcomed Owen. The sort of malicious kind, but it gave Owen a truth erudite to him.

     

    And there’s a beauty to truth, even the most dreadful of it.

     

    When a wrestler catches audiences’ true mindsets, when their grave heads that fans aren’t always behind them, aren’t really supporting them, their world falls into panic desolation. The cheers have fallen, and all motivation is gone. These cheers do not fall a little—they careen to the floor and shatter into tiny fragments, never to be built up again; shards always reveal the cracks. And the wrestler’s world is never quite whole again. It’s an aching sort of evolving.

     

    This, too, followed his vision of Bret. All the flaws inherent in his brother. Oh, he’s propped up while Owen had to work, work, work, and for little fanfare. Those purple sunglasses, the glistening hair, the black and white gear made up for it. Bret was a superhero, and Owen was the errand boy. Seeing Bret struggle to tag him in at the 1994 Royal Rumble, well, what do they say about final straws? 

    Owen Hart attacking Bret Hart at Royal Rumble 1994 before WrestleMania X

    Owen brutalized his brother in front of the whole world and their judgment. But was he truly his brother’s keeper? The voices denounced him, and he would walk the rest of his years as a heel. That was fine, because he had no pressure to be perfect. All he needed was to be good.

     

    Come time for the opener, Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X, bitter Owen and mournful Bret came to a head. Confident and rageful, Owen steeled his blue eyes at his brother. Ready. Believing himself capable of surpassing the golden child.

     

    Madison Square Garden dings with a bell to signal the start of this family dispute. They grappled to the floor, the stoic Bret coolly transitioned Owen’s Fireman Carry to a leg hold. Owen raced to the ropes to break his brother’s grasp around his waist. Focus dwindled. 

     

    Briefly, he steeled himself to gain control of Bret’s hips, yet the technician maneuvered it to hurl him outside. Chopping Bret down with a drop toehold, Owen engaged a headlock. Swinging each other’s arms around, Owen yanked Bret’s flowing mane to drop him on the white canvas. Bret eludes a whip to the corner. Clutching at Bret’s hair again and again, Owen snarls at how unflinching he is, how the crowd calls his name. 

     

    Flung outside, Owen teased an escape to the back, only for Bret to reintroduce him to the New York fans. Bret subverted a clothesline, dropping Owen with a falling crucifix pin. There’s a certain caution to his movements, restrained, just so. 

     

    Striking a kicking blow that laid brother low, Owen taunted him, posturing him with the same pose fans clamored for.

     

    Maintaining his dominance, Owen crushed Bret with a backbreaker. He wrenched his spine back, clutching Bret’s chin. Following an escape outside, Owen reunited with Bret within the ropes, his advances blocked by Bret and a surprise roll-up pin. Perched on the top rope, Owen soared as the wind blew his blonde locks back; Bret rolled out of his path. 

     

    A retaliatory clothesline from Bret gave him hope, but only just. Another backbreaker, followed by an elbow drop. A miscommunication with Referee Earl Hebner permeated irritation with the Hitman. Over the top rope, Bret rocked Owen while tenderizing his own knee in the process. 

     

    Smelling blood in the water, Owen stomps on the very leg Bret limped on, tweaking the left leg and unleashing a falling elbow on it. Tethering his brother to the ring post, he tormented the knee, slamming it. Again and again and again. Clipping the wings of everyone’s favorite angel. Locking in a figure-four leglock, Owen arrogantly yet cathartically raised his arms in preemptive celebration. 

     

    Bret finally ruins Owen’s momentum with an enzuigiri. All caution has been cast aside. Flattened his brother with a bulldog and a piledriver. Superplexing Owen from the top turnbuckle, Bret lay in agony alongside the brother he shared laughs and sobs and screams with, all those memories as pink and black as a fading memory and deepening pain. 

     

    Bret had Owen on the ropes, draining the life with a sleeper hold; a low blow, a mule kick breaks it. Gritting his teeth, Owen stole Bret’s Sharpshooter, sinking as low as he could. As though lost in the quiet of space, Bret’s screams of sweet, dear agony go unheard, but reversed his misfortunes with his patented, true Sharpshooter.

     

    Carrying Bret atop his shoulders, Owen nearly succumbed to a Victory Roll pin attempt, but rolled it over in a snap. One, two, three. Bret’s shoulders on the mat, staring up at the lights.

     

    Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X

     

    Exhausted, Owen jubilantly tumbled away, Bret awash in disbelief amid the booming drums of his brother’s theme song. Spit whitened at the edges of Owen’s lips, counting those victorious mat-striking trilogy.

     

    His brother slain before the eyes of New York and cameras broadcasting worldwide, Owen sowed jealousy and reaped vindication. Nothing is left tying him to the Excellence of Execution. The Blackheart, the King of Hearts, now reigns in the solace he’s overcome the prodigal, fortunate one.

     

    This match did not end the night, however. Bret would face the enormous Yokozuna for the WWF Championship in a winning effort. The brothers only opened the show for audiences at home. Yet, it cemented one thing: Owen could stand on his own to succeed. No longer did he have to hold anyone above his shoulders, but he was above theirs.

     

    Poetically enough, Bret ended his night as just that, hoisted on the shoulders of the locker room. He had to let go of Owen, an inhale and exhale because tonight, he didn’t have to be perfect,  so he could finally just be good. He didn’t take pride in his hurt; it didn’t make him seem large and tragic. Either way, he’d play on a grand stage with not just himself as the audience.

     

    Hate may have won tonight, but love always wins; a few years later, Bret appealed to Owen against Americans he grew to despise. 

     

    Bret Hart and Owen Hart’s WrestleMania X epic is one of my earliest memories of pro wrestling. It’s listed in WWE’s lists of great WrestleMania matches, and it has stamped its place in wrestling history simply by being a great match that told a compelling story with a captivating build. Fans will mirror this sentiment in videos, lists, and casual conversations. 

     

    Each time I revisit this bout, I always sense an intensity that feels a little too real to be the silly wrestling we all know. I walk away with the notion that Bret and Owen’s rivalry had elements of reality to it, that it was built on actual conversations and annoyances with love still always at the center of things.

     

    I’m but one of many writers who justifiably hype up this legendary match. Soap opera and sport coalesced into tragedy.

     

    Stories like Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X, an acclaimed brotherly feud, give us fans the moments with which to remember. Whether it references pop culture, relates to our sensibilities, or echoes biblical epics, pro wrestling resonates with that human element as our heroes and villains tangibly age beside us.

     

    There is no other story.

  • Rhea Ripley Wants Jade Cargill To Be Proud Of Their Match

    Rhea Ripley Wants Jade Cargill To Be Proud Of Their Match

    Rhea Ripley is set to challenge Jade Cargill for the WWE Women’s Championship at WrestleMania 42. Rhea Ripley has had her eyes on the prize since winning the Elimination Chamber back in February. By winning that match, Ripley earned a shot against Cargill at  the grandest stage of them all.

    Since Jade Cargill joined WWE, fans have been salivating about the prospect of Rhea Ripley vs. Jade Cargill, due to both of their power-house natures. Now, we finally get to see the match. Recently, Rhea Ripley spoke with Joe La Puma during a Sneaker Shopping with Complex interview. During the talk, Rhea was asked about Wrestlemania and revealed that she  wants to give Jade a good match.

    ”This is such a big match that people have wanted since she came to the WWE and we’ve finally come to it, at WrestleMania 42. With her, I want to go out there and I want to give her a good match. Whether she wins or loses, because let’s be honest, I’m going to take her championship at WrestleMania 42. It’s going to happen, it’s Rhea Bloody Ripley’s show. Like, I’m going to take that championship. But, I want her to be proud no matter what the outcome is.”

    Rhea Ripley has held 6 singles world championships in WWE and a win at WrestleMania 42 would be her 7th major win. But, Jade Cargill is looking to reclaim her gold in what is arguably her highest career match to date. Their match will take place on WrestleMania night two, Sunday, April 19.

    If you use any of the quotes above, please h/t Bodyslam.Net. 

  • Kidd Bandit Announces Debut Event For T4T Wrestling

    Kidd Bandit Announces Debut Event For T4T Wrestling

    The first ever event for T4T Wrestling will be held on July 3 in Los Angeles, Kidd Bandit reveals.

    Formerly known as T-Boy Wrestling, Kidd Bandit officially announced on Monday, April 13 that the successor to it, T4T Wrestling will be hosting their first ever event on July 3 in Los Angeles, California.

    The former co-founder, Mitch Miller closed down the promotion due to the allegations of financial malfeasance. Since then, Kidd Bandit has been on a mission to restore the true meaning of what T4T Wrestling is.

    A statement From T4T:

    “Express yourself through storytelling, music, drag, dance and stage combat all fused with the spectacle of pro wrestling. This is a space for bold ideas, bigger personalities and unapologetic self-expression.”

    T4T has a “boot camp,” a 10-week training program developed to “help participants develop and fine tune a short live performance” across a variety of performance art mediums ranging from pro wrestling to drag to dance or any combination of them.

    Bandit told OutSports, “[T Boy Wrestling participants] weren’t really trained to be wrestlers. They were trained to just fill a slot in the show. What we’re hoping to do is make this a serious pathway to becoming a pro wrestler. We want you guys to be able to take this craft, mold it into your own and then make money or go out there and be additional representation for the community.

    “This isn’t for the approval of the wrestling crowd. This is for the queer community. It’s not like I can’t tap into my resources and bring in capable folks. I want this to be serious because wrestling is important to me, and if it can give the same kind of level of empowerment that it gave me to our potential signups, all the better.”

    If you or anyone you know wants to sign up and be part of the show, you can fill out the details and sign up here.

  • Megan Bayne Emerging As AEW Women’s Division Star

    Megan Bayne Emerging As AEW Women’s Division Star

    All Elite Wrestling’s women’s division features a mix of emerging talent and established stars, making any “next up” discussion a crowded one. Even so, one name continues to separate from the pack. Megan Bayne looks ready for that defining moment. It’s not if she reaches the AEW Women’s World Championship, it’s when, and when she does, she has the profile to hold it for an extended stretch.

    The Megasus

    Bayne is currently one half of the AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions, teaming with Lena Kross as Divine Dominion. The pair captured the titles in March, giving Bayne her first championship in AEW a little more than a year after joining the roster in February 2025.

    Her presence stands out immediately. Listed at 5-foot-11 and 187 pounds, Bayne carries a size and intensity that few in the division can match. She projects dominance before the bell rings, with a look and style that feel built for main-event moments. The facial expressions, the gear, the body language, she has the complete sense of presentation locked in.

    Bayne’s experience also adds to her case. From dominating intergender matches to winning independent championships and creating viral moments, she has built quite the resume. She is approaching 10 years in the ring, yet has not fully broken through as a top champion on a major stage, yet. Most wrestlers at 27 are very green and inexperienced. That is not the case for Megan.

    With the right direction, Bayne has the tools to anchor the division as champion. Her in-ring work continues to impress, and while her microphone skills are still developing, that gap is not uncommon and can be addressed through presentation and creative support. AEW has shown it can elevate talent into credible contenders, giving audiences a reason to invest in their rise. Many top talents in the industry have made their name in AEW, and she looks to be no different.

    The broader landscape of women’s wrestling has shifted. The days of bra and panty matches are dead. There are no longer matches booked purely on sex appeal. The females are able to show their true talents, and that they have just as much skill as the men, if not even more. Matches now are longer, the competition is deeper, and expectations are higher. While booking can still improve, performers like Bayne make a strong argument for more consistent placement in headline spots. You simply cannot deny or ignore women of her caliber, making main events inevitable.

    Final Thoughts

    At 27, Bayne’s trajectory points upward and beyond. She is setting the standard of what the women’s division of the future will be. It is no longer a question of if she becomes a world champion, but how often she reaches that level. 

  • NJPW Best Of The Super Juniors Participants Reveal

    NJPW Best Of The Super Juniors Participants Reveal

    On April 4th, 2026 NJPW reveal the blocks & the last 2 participants for the 33rd annual Best Of The Super Juniors Tournament, the tournament starts on May 14th & ends on June 7th.

    Here the blocks & participants in this year’s tournament.

    Block A

    Master Wato (6th entry) (2023 winner)

    Ryusuke Taguchi (22nd entry) (2012 winner) (2011 & 2016 runner up)

    Kosei Fujita (3rd entry) (2025 winner)

    Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion Robbie X (2nd entry)

    Francesco Akira (5th entry)

    Junior Heavyweight Champion Douki (7th entry)

    Titan (7th entry) (2023 runner up)

    Valiente Jr (1st entry)

    Nick Wayne (2nd entry)

    Jun Kasai (1st entry)

    Block B

    El Desperado (10th entry) (2024 winner) (2020 & 2022 runner up)

    Kushida (13th entry) (2015 & 2017 winner) (2014 runner up)

    Yoh (8th entry) (2021 & 2025 runner up)

    Robbie Eagles (8th entry)

    Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion Taiji Ishimori (10th entry) (2018 & 2024 runner up)

    Jakob Austin Young (1st entry)

    Sho (9th entry)

    Yoshinobu Kanemaru (9th entry)

    HYO (1st entry)

    Daisuke Sasaki (3rd entry)

    The top 2 scorers in each block goes to the Finals & can watch all 13 shows on NJPW World.

    Notes

    Most entrants in this year’s field

    Ryusuke Taguchi (22)

    Kushida (13)

    El Desperado & Taiji Ishimori (10)

  • AJPW Champion Carnival Night 1 Results – April 12, 2026

    AJPW Champion Carnival Night 1 Results – April 12, 2026

    On April 12th, 2026 AJPW aired the 1st night of Champion Carnival live in Tokyo, Japan inside Korakuen Hall.

    The event was held front of 1,194 fans and was also viewable on AJPW TV. The event was headlined by Go Shiozaki versus Yuma Anzai.

    Go Shiozaki picked up the victory against Yuma Anzai in the main event, earning himself two points. You can see the full results and current block standings below.

    AJPW Champion Carnival Night 1 Results

    • 6 Man Tag Team Match
      AJPW TV 6 Man Tag Team Champions Dan Tamura & Hikaru Sato & Hokuto Omori defeated Junior Heavyweight Champion Seigo Tachibana, Seiki Yoshioka & Shota Kofuji via La Magistral on Tachibana (10:45)
    • Non Title Block A Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      Rei Saito (2) defeated Gaora Television Champion Kumaarashi (0) via BBQ Bomb (8:22)
    • Block B Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      Daisuke Sekimoto defeated Yuma Aoyagi via Big Bang Catastrophe (15:14)
    • Block A Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      Kengo Mashimo (2) defeated World Tag Team Champion Talos (0) via Modified Small Package (7:31)
    • 8 Man Tag Team Match
      Triple Crown Heavyweight Champion Kento Miyahara, Ryuki Honda, Atsuki Aoyagi & Rising Hayato defeated Havoc (Shotaro Ashino & Odyssey), Ryo Inoue & Musashi via Shutdown Suplex on Inoue (12:14)
    • Block B Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      Xyon (2) defeated Hideki Suzuki (0) via Diving Headbutt (5:55)
    • Block B Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      World Tag Team Champion Ren Ayabe (2) defeated Jun Saito (0) via Death Roulette (20:12)
    • Block A Match Of The 2026 Champion Carnival
      Go Shiozaki (2) defeated Yuma Anzai (0) via Lariat (23:49) (Recommend)

    Standings After Night 1 

    Block A

    1st Place- Go Shiozaki, Kengo Mashimo & Rei Saito (2 Points) (1-0)

    Last Place- Gaora Television Champion Kumaarashi, World Tag Team Champion Talos & Yuma Anzai (0 Points) (0-1) & Triple Crown Heavyweight Champion Kento Miyahara & Odyssey (0 Points) (0-0)

    Block B

    1st Place- World Tag Team Champion Ren Ayabe, Daisuke Sekimoto & Xyon (2 Points) (1-0)

    Last Place- Yuma Aoyagi, Hideki Suzuki & Jun Saito (0 Points) (0-1) & Madoka Kikuta & Ryuki Honda (0 Points) (0-0)

    Stay tuned for more AJPW Champion Carnival results in the coming days.