NJPW G1 Climax 32 - July 16 - August 18, 2022

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Friends and pals alike......a G1 thread has existed for a month now :lol
 

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Friends and pals alike......a G1 thread has existed for a month now :lol
tbf theres like 6 discussion threads pinned including an old PPV :p
 

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A whole 8 days old :worried and Jeff yours were in the AMERICA thread lol should I just unstick that and merge with the other NJPW one I guess:lol
 

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There, no more America exclusive thread and the two day old Strong thread has even been unpinned
 

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A whole 8 days old :worried and Jeff yours were in the AMERICA thread lol should I just unstick that and merge with the other NJPW one I guess:lol
fsr they all look the same early in the AM on mobile when they all start with njpw :p. but yes, USA and Japanese not on the same sticky is cool too
 

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I just merged the threads so NJPW USA and Japan are together now lol, didn't know how else to simply them
 
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A Block=Okada
B Block=Jay White
C Block=Naito
D Block=Shingo

Predictions so far and we are a couple of Weeks before this bad boy starts. Okada beating Jay to guarantee a future Title Match even if he loses the G1 Climax seems likely and man how can not have Shingo vs Naito at least once at this point? Hiromu vs Shingo was damn good just do the Match already New Japan.
 

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Massive matches, massive events set in the G1 Climax 32 schedule! 【G132】​

G1 lineup confirmed
0621_G1_3.jpg

Watch ALL of G1 Climax 32 LIVE in English on NJPW World!

The block match lineups have now been set for G1 Climax 32. With a record 28 participants across four blocks this year, the tournament will see action from every block, every night, on the way to a Budokan showdown for all four blocks with eight matches on a stacked card. Then the next two nights will see tournament semifinals and finals as we determine who makes it through a record breaking summer!

NIGHT ONE: July 16, Sapporo
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Kazuchika Okada and Jeff Cobb collide in a match that determined B Block in 2021! Hiroshi Tanahashi battles tournament debutant Aaron Henare! SANADA meets Jay White and long time rivals WIll Ospreay and El Phantasmo do battle!

NIGHT TWO: July 17, Sapporo
0621_G1_0717.jpg

Sapporo native Taichi seeks the homefield advantage over Tomohiro Ishii! Zack Sabre Jr. and KENTA continue a streak of G1 classics! Toru Yano faces the massive JONAH! Shingo Takagi and Juice Robinson collide!

NIGHT THREE: July 20, Sendai
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A clash of giants as Lance Archer and Bad Luck Fale meet! Tama Tonga faces former ally Chase Owens! Hirooki Goto tackles Tetsuya Naito and David Finlay meets Yujiro Takahashi.

NIGHT FOUR: July 23 Ota
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A match that decided A Block in 2020, Tomohiro Ishii and Jay White go to war! YOSHI-HASHI faces Shingo Takagi! A CHAOS derby of Toru Yano and Kazuchika Okada! ZSJ faces Aaron Henare!

NIGHT FIVE: July 24 Ota
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Hiroshi Tanahashi and Tetsuya Naito a main event in any arena! El Phantasmo and Yujiro Takahashi in an all BULLET CLUB clash! Jeff Cobb faces Bad Luck Fale, and SANADA battles rival Taichi!

NIGHT SIX: July 26, Korakuen
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KENTA faces EVIL! Former partners David Finlay and Juice Robinson explode! Tom Lawlor battles Lance Archer, Great-O-Khan meets nemesis Chase Owens!

NIGHT SEVEN: July 27, Korakuen
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Toru Yano takes on bad Luck Fale! Hirooki Goto faces Aaron henare! Tomohiro Ishii and Tama Tonga collide, and Will Ospreay meets Yujiro Takahashi

NIGHT EIGHT: July 30, Aichi
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Tom Lawlor faces the giant JONAH! SANADA and Great-O-Khan in a Wrestle Kingdom rematch! Hiroshi Tanahashi meets Zack Sabre Jr., Shingo Takagi faces David Finlay!

Night NINE: July 31, Aichi
0621_G1_0731.jpg

Five block matches! Tetsuya Naito and EVIL clash! Jay White faces Chase Owens! YOSHI-HASHI tackles Juice Robinson, Jeff Cobb meets Lance Archer and Kazuchika Okada faces Bad Luck Fale!

Night TEN: August 2, Hamamatsu
0621_G1_0802.jpg

Double B Block action sees Tomohiro Ishii vs Great-O-Khan and Tama Tonga vs SANADA! David Finlay vs Will Ospreay in a New Japan Cup 2021 rematch! Tom Lawlor faces dream opponent Toru Yano! Hirooki Goto vs KENTA!

Night ELEVEN: August 5, Matsuyama
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Double C Block matches see Tetsuya Naito versus Aaron Henare and Hiroshi Tanahashi facing EVIL! A JONAH vs Jeff Cobb hoss fight! Taichi vs Chase Owens, Juice Robinson vs Yujiro Takahashi!

Night TWELVE: August 6, Osaka
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Double D Block matches- Will Ospreay vs Shingo Takagi and YOSHI-HASHI vs El Phantasmo! Toru Yano meets Lance Archer! Great-O-Khan vs Jay White, Hirooki Goto vs ZSJ!

Night THIRTEEN: August 7, Osaka
0621_G1_0807.jpg

A Block action sees Kazuchika Okada face JONAH and Tom Lawlor taking on Bad Luck Fale! Juice Robinson vs El Phantasmo in a BULLET CLUB derby! Aaron Henare vs EVIL, Tomohiro Ishii vs Chase Owens!

Night FOURTEEN: August 9, Hiroshima
0621_G1_0809.jpg

B Block double up with Tama Tonga vs Taichi and SANADA vs Chase Owens! Tetsuya Naito vs KENTA! JONAH vs Lance Archer! YOSHI-HASHI meets Yujiro Takahashi

Night FIFTEEN: August 10, Hiroshima
0621_G1_0810.jpg

Double C Block action has Zack Sabre Jr. and EVIL, and Hirooki Goto vs Hiroshi Tanahashi! Kazuchika Okada and Tom Lawlor do battle! Tama Tonga vs Great-O-Khan! David Finlay vs El Phantasmo!

Night SIXTEEN: August 13, Machida
0621_G1_0813.jpg

D Block action sees YOSHI-HASHI vs Will Ospreay, and Shingo Takagi vs Yujiro Takahashi! Toru Yano vs Jeff Cobb! Taichi vs Jay White! Aaron Henare vs KENTA!

Night SEVENTEEN: August 14, Nagano
0621_G1_0814.jpg

Hiroshi Tanahashi vs KENTA, Taichi vs great-O-Khan, Tom Lawlor vs Jeff Cobb and YOSHI-HASHI vs David Finlay in critical matches for each block!

Night EIGHTEEN: August 16 Nippon Budokan
0621_G1_0816.jpg

The final two matches from each block on one bumper card will see the final four set!
 

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Digging the Graphics for the G1 Climax this Year. Ospreay vs ELP didn't they face each other in the New Japan Cup? Pretty sure they did so why not give ELP the win there to possibly set up a future IWGP US Title shot down the line.
 
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lmaooooooooo
 

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G1 Climax 32 Preview: A Block 【G132】​

G1 set to begin July 16

0620_G1_2.jpg

The tournament of tournaments is almost upon us, as the biggest field in history of 28 stars get ready to participate in G1 CLimax 32. From the first night on July 16 in Sapporo all the way to the August 16-18 final triple header, every block is in action every night, and that means big hitting matches- none bigger than the big boy A Block. Let’s look at the entrants.
Watch ALL of G1 Climax 32 LIVE and in English on NJPW World!

Kazuchika Okada
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11th entry, 11th consecutive. 2012, 2014, 2021 Winner.
Career G1 W:L record: 65-24-4

Kazuchika Okada heads into his 12th G1 looking for his fourth overall victory. While the Rainmaker has to be heading into A Block as the favourite, the demanding nature of the biggest, heaviest and most powerful of all four groups presents an intimidating challenge. After starting NJPW’s 50th Anniversary year by winning the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, Okada had promised to go through the year as the standard bearer of NJPW, and to win the New Japan Cup and G1 in the process as champion. Those plans have been disrupted, by Tetsuya Naito in the cup, and by Jay White in IWGP competition. Will the Rainmaker get back on track on the road to next year’s Wrestle Kingdom by winning G1 Climax 32?

KEY MATCH: August 10, Hiroshima vs Tom Lawlor
Much like Okada, Tom Lawlor heads into the G1 as a recently deposed, dominant champion with a significant point to prove. Okada would be remiss to look past the debuting Lawlor, who could give the 2021 G1 winner all he can say grace over in Hiroshima, and though the Filthy one is as accomplished as any of the tournament debutants, the scene could be set for a significant upset on August 10.

Tom Lawlor
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Debut entry
He may not be carrying the STRONG Openweight Championship into the G1, but Tom Lawlor heads into his debut tournament with his reputation decidedly established over on STRONG, and with the pressure that comes from representing both a brand and his faction in Team Filthy. The former UFC fighter will have to lean on every bit of his submission and striking expertise in order to get past some huge opposition, but Lawlor is unlikely to be intimidated.

KEY MATCH: July 30, Aichi vs JONAH
The closest we will come to a STRONG derby during the G1, Lawlor and JONAH will represent the high standard of competition on Saturday nights, and present an interesting stylistic clash in its own right. How Lawlor will tackle the giant JONAH is intriguing indeed, and the subtext of a struggle for power between two perceived faction leaders in Team Filthy and TMDK make this one not to be missed.

JONAH
lawlor-1.png

Debut entry
G1 Climax 32 will see JONAH head to Japan for the first time since 2015, and for the first time with NJPW. After his first appearance in an NJPW ring back at Battle in the Valley last November, the Top Dog has been living up to that name on NJPW STRONG, but now has stiff competition in the big boy block of G1 competition. An irresistible force, JONAH nonetheless finds himself up against more than a few immoveable objects; how will he fare?

KEY MATCH: August 5, Matsuyama vs Jeff Cobb
JONAH prides himself at being the model of athletic big men in modern pro-wrestling, but he will have his work cut out for him in proving that point against Jeff Cobb. A hoss fight that has wowed crowds in each of their three singles meetings on the US independents, this first meeting in Japan, and on its biggest stage to date, will be unmissable.

Toru Yano

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17th entry, 16th consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 55-72-1

Toru Yano enters somewhat of a block of death in this year’s G1, with tough and sizable competition that is more than capable of putting the hurting on the master producer. Yet history has proven that Yano is more than capable of polishing off bigger men, and in short order during the G1 Climax. We are sure to see the Yano magic being successful at least once during the series; the question is how many times, and will it be the undoing of a key figure down the road?

KEY MATCH: July 27, Korakuen vs Bad Luck Fale
Yano has been a consistent source of humiliation and anger from Bad Luck Fale through the years, only a second round New Japan Cup victory in 2017 giving Fale the 1 in a 5-1 singles record to Yano. With their most recent singles bout securing Yano’s KOPW 2020 champion status due to some decidedly sneaky tactics in their bodyslam or last corner pad match, Yano will be highly confident in his ability to embarrass the Rogue General once again, and doing so will set him in good stead for the second half of his campaign.

Jeff Cobb

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4th entry, 4th consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 16-11

Jeff Cobb heads into his fourth G1 having scored 16 career wins from his prior three entries. An admirable total indeed, but one can not overlook the point that half of those wins came in last year’s tournament alone. Cobb was the first man ever to go 8-0 in the league portion of the G1, and should he repeat the same feat in 2022, he’ll run away with the G1 trophy. A tall task? For most, but perhaps not for the Imperial Unit.

KEY MATCH: July 16, Sapporo vs Kazuchika Okada
A critical final league match against kazuchika Okada in 2021 saw Jeff Cobb forced out of the running at the final hurdle. On July 16, he will seek revenge in his first match of the campaign. First bout or not, this will be no less critical to either man’s chances of making the finals, and with some all important revenge as well as two points at stake, Cobb will be bringing everything he has to the table in Sapporo.

Bad Luck Fale
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7th entry, first in three years
Career G1 W:L record: 29-26

Bad Luck Fale makes his first G1 appearance since 2019. Carrying a positive all time win:loss record, the Rogue General may be a dark horse for semifinal contention, but can easily be the better of anybody in his block on any given night. Can he surprise the A Block and make it to the final four?

KEY MATCH: July 20, Sendai vs Lance Archer
The epitome of the big boy block is the big boy clash in Sendai with Fale taking on Lance Archer. With meetings in the New Japan Cup in 2018 and the G1 in 2019, Fale and Archer are 1-1, and with their meeting early on in the campaign, this de facto rubber match could well set the pace for both men through the rest of the campaign.

Lance Archer
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Sixth entry, first in 3 years
Career G1 W:L record: 19-26

Lance Archer’s 2019 G1 entry was a revelation for the Murderhawk Monster, one that set him on the path to his first IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship reign, and eventually to All Elite Wrestling, whom he represents along with Suzuki-Gun in this year’s tournament. His 19-26 record belies his incredible in ring ability, and he remains a force to be reckoned with as he enters his sixth tournament.

KEY MATCH: August 16, Budokan vs Kazuchika Okada
Lance Archer’s last league match sees him take on Kazuchika Okada in the Budokan. The Murderhawk Monster is 0-5 against the Rainmaker, but the significance of the stage, and of the timing will not be lost on the big man. An upset could see Archer through and Okada out, and Archer will stop at nothing to make that happen.​
 

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G1 Climax Preview: B Block 【G132】​

G1 to kick off July 16 in Hokkaido

0620_G1_3.jpg

G1 Climax 32 kicks off on July 16 with the biggest lineup in tournament history! B Block will have all eyes on IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Switchblade jay White, but there is no shortage of dark horse contenders to try and take what would be a historic victory from the Catalyst of Professional Wrestling.
Watch ALL of G1 Climax 32 LIVE IN ENGLISH on NJPW World!

Jay White
G1_選手_17.jpg

4th entry, first in two years
IWGP World Heavyweight Champion
2019 finalist
Career G1 W:L record: 18-10


While some blocks and some G1 years can be wide open with predictions near impossible, B Block in 2022 can leave little room for argument. Switchblade Jay White will be the man to beat, and head and shoulders the favourite to make the final four. Though Jay White’s best career G1 performance saw him fall at the final hurdle in 2019, both tournament and non tournament form are in his favour. The Catalyst of Professional Wrestling has routinely logged 12 points in every single one of this three tournament outings, a record that would put him through to the final four on a perfect record in 2022. While White will have a target on his back, and few if nay allies in his block, it still feels as if an IWGP Champion winning the G1 is a distinct and strong possibility for the first time since 2000.

KEY MATCH: July 23 Ota vs Tomohiro Ishii
jay White headed into his Dominion IWGP World Championship win over Kazuchika Okada crowing long and hard about being 3-1 over the Rainmaker, and extending that advantage to the 4-1 he’s at now. An impressive feat indeed, but it always has seemed as if a different CHAOS member has caused more problems for Jay White over the years than Okada. Tomohiro Ishii is 3-1 over the Switchblade, has denied him the NEVER Openweight Championship as recently as last November, and denied him a spot in the 2020 G1 finals with a win in Ryogoku. While the oddsmakers may favour Jay White in B Block, if not the overall tournament, the Stone Pitbull represents a near brick wall of an impediment for White, one that he must demolish in Ota early in his campaign.

Tama Tonga
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5th entry, 2nd consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 14-22

G1 Climax 31 was a revelation for Tama Tonga, who was able to put in some stunning performances, and provide eventual winner Kazuchika Okada with the sole blemish on his record. Re-establishing himself as a singles player, Tama headed into the New Japan Cup back in spring with high hopes that were cut off by his violent expulsion from BULLET CLUB. Now the Good Bad Guy seeks to redress his negative career record, get to the final four, and perhaps most important, target the man who pulled the strings to eliminate him from the club he helped create in Switchblade Jay White.

KEY MATCH: August 16, Budokan vs Jay White
Tonga will go through the entire G1 with eyes on his final opponent. This is the match that will motivate the G.o.D member, and the one he wants to win more than any other. Doing so could well determine who makes the final four from B Block.

Tomohiro Ishii
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10th entry, 10th consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 31-43

Tomohiro Ishii closes in on a decade of straight G1 appearances, and though his career win:loss record is in the negative, he carries with him a legacy of amazing G1 performances, and big time results. From Katsuyori Shibata to Jon Moxley, and yes, to Jay White, all can attest to how hard Ishii brings the fight in the tournament of tournaments. Yet Ishii has never made it past the block phase of the G1. With four advancing to semifinals, might the Stone Pitbull be a dark horse this year?

KEY MATCH: August 16 Budokan vs SANADA

Ishii’s tournament performances have been transformative not just for his own career but his opponents’. Wars with Taichi would transform the Holy Emperor from a cowardly former junior heavyweight to a prideful fighting heavyweight striker. In the Budokan, Ishii will be fighting for his last two points and to reach the semifinals, but he will also expect to bring a fire out of SANADA that is rarely seen; this match could come to be a critical turning point for both men in the remainder of 2022 and beyond.

Great-O-Khan
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2nd entry 2nd consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 4-5

Though he came away with a negative 4-5 record last year, Great-O-Khan proved that he had the versatility required to go far in G1 Climaxes to come. Adapting himself to each of his opponent’s styles, the Dominator showed he had the tools, and after a 2022 thus far saw him to his first career championships in NJPW, O-Khan could be a significant threat to the final four. Already a world championship level contender in 13 different disciplines, and having climbed to the top of the tag division with Jeff Cobb, the next step on the road to global domination is the ultimate singles glory of a G1 Climax trophy.

KEY MATCH: August 14, Nagano vs Taichi
Of all the disciplines that O-Khan is a scholar in and master of, the Dominator cannot count sumo, or the AJPW King’s Road, among them. Will the chameleon like O-Khan seek to adapt himself to Taichi’s in-ring stylings? Or will he play to his own strengths and take down the Holy Emperor in his own way? This is an exciting clash of styles in Nagano.

SANADA
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7th entry 7th consecutive
2020 Finalist
G1 record: 26-29

SANADA enters his seventh G1 looking to finally get one step beyond his 2020 finalist position and earn his first trophy in the Tournament of Tournaments. Cold Skull finally earned his first career NJPW singles championship this February when he captured the IWGP United States Championship, but fate saw to it that he would have to vacate before even making his first defence. Still with many a dream unachieved in New Japan, his first G1 win would do a lot of good to a year blighted by misfortune.

KEY MATCH: July 30, Aichi vs Great-O-Khan
Though they didn’t meet for the first time one on one until Wrestle Kingdom, Great-O-Khan’s first singles match with SANADA back on January 5 was the very model of his G1 Climax 31 campaign strategy. Out as much to prove himself in SANADA’s aesthetic style of professional wrestling as he was to secure victory, O-Khan found himself taking to the air, but unable to get the final three. SANADA carried the pride of victory with him out of the Tokyo Dome, and into a successful challenge to Hiroshi Tanahashi in Sapporo back in February. Now he hopes another win will set up more great things- and get some much needed revenge on the United Empire after Will Ospreay put him on the shelf with a fractured orbital bone.

Chase Owens
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2nd entry 2nd consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 2-7

In the G1 Climax, winning is everything, but while the most wins will bring you the trophy, the quality of those wins can be a more than valid consolidation. Every champion has a target on their back in tournaments like these, and the status of Ace perhaps even greater. Owens’ Korakuen Hall victory over Hiroshi Tanahashi was something he could rightfully dine out on for months to come. Yet Owens would capitalize on momentum gained, and he and Bad Luck Fale would pick up his first ever IWGP Championship back in May. Though his tag reign was a brief one, Owens can head into the G1 with a renewed confidence, and with sights on taking scoring another big win.

KEY MATCH: July 20, Sendai vs Tama Tonga
Back in March, as BULLET CLUB entered the New Japan Cup under a veil of controversy. As every member of the group was forced with a choice between the Guerrillas of Destiny and Jay White, Owens would stay loyal to Bad Luck Fale in siding with the Catalyst. The best way for Owens to prove his loyalty through this G1 would be to take down Tama in Sendai.

Taichi
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4th entry, 4th consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 11-16

Taichi started last year’s G1 strong before a mid table collapse led to a string of defeats, and rib injuries that would put him out of contention for the ensuing tour. The Holy Emperor certainly embodies how physically demanding the tournament can become, and has a tough road of demanding matches ahead of him. yet after a spring dominated by KOPW bouts with Shingo Takagi, could the conditioning and consistency be there for Taichi this year?

KEY MATCH: July 17, Sapporo vs Tomohiro Ishii
Taichi reacted with despair at finding out that he had the same block assignment as Tomohiro Ishii, every one of their bouts being extremely violent affairs, and all bar one of them ending in defeat. Taichi has Ishii straight out of the gate in his first block match this year, and gets him in his home town of Sapporo. Are the stars aligning for the Holy Emperor to start strong, or to be knocked off his perch?​
 
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G1 Climax 32 Night One (July 16) Full card, Preview 【G132】​

G1 kicks off in Sapporo

After two years in the autumn, G1 Climax returns to its rightful place in the midsummer this year. The tournament of tournaments will also return to its traditional starting place of Hokkaido, with two big nights of action to come completely free on NJPW World.
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Main event: A Block- Kazuchika Okada (0-0) vs Jeff Cobb (0-0)
Singles record: 3-1 Okada of which G1 2-0 Okada

The last B Block match of G1 Climax 31 is the first A Block match of G1 Climax 32. In 2021, Jeff Cobb stood on the threshold of a perfect league record, an unprecedented feat in a ten man block format. Yet his incredible 8-0 streak came crashing to a halt at the hands of the Rainmaker, who went on to win his third G1 Climax trophy the very next night.

While a lot of talk has been around the ‘big boy’ A Block, Okada and Cobb are the two favourites of a group full of hard hitters. Four of the last five years have seen the eventual tournament winner win their opening match, and with more condensed seven man blocks this year, any loss can be very ill afforded. More than ever before, Cobb will be fighting to rectify his 1-3 record against the Rainmaker, and to harken back to his convincing MetLife Dome victory last September.

8th Match: B Block SANADA (0-0) vs Jay White (0-0)
Singles record: 1-0 White

With every point even more critical than ever in this year’s tournament, few are planning on bucking the trend of first match winners going on to win the whole G1. Yet Jay White will be looking to buck a different trend. Already a 2019 finalist, the Switchblade will be harking back to G1 Climax 2000. That was the last time the G1 had four blocks, albeit of five wrestlers instead of seven. It was also when Kensuke Sasaki, in the same B Block position as Jay White, won the G1 as reigning IWGP Heavyweight Champion; the second and final man to do so. While Jay White cares not for history, he is keen on making his own, and taking the IWGP World heavyweight Championship through a similar path.

That fateful 2000 G1 started for Sasaki with a convincing, sub seven minute win over Brian Johnston. White may have a harder and longer time of it against SANADA however. With their one singles meeting in 2020 in Osaka seeing the Switchblade pushed past the 20 minute mark, SANADA will be looking to match his classical style against White’s and this time emerge victorious.

7th Match: D Block Will Ospreay (0-0) vs El Phantasmo (0-0)
Singles record 3-3

Fans in Sapporo will be in for a spectacle when El Phantasmo and WIll Ospreay tie up in the first match for D Block. On again, off again rivals since 2018, Phantasmo’s first appearance in an NJPW ring saw him getting a tag team victory over Ospreay back at Dontaku three years ago, and ELP wasted no time getting two singles victories, contentious though they may have been, over the Commonwealth Kingpin in the cerulean blue. Since the 2019 Super J-Cup though, Ospreay has been on top of their rivalry, resulting in a current 3-3 record between the two men over the course of their careers.

In 2022, a spectacular New japan Cup meeting fell Ospreay’s way thanks, on no small part, to a mental block surrounding ELP’s inability to use the Sudden Death superkick, it’s loaded secret being revealed two months prior. Now, Phantasmo states, he is free of his block and hungry for success. There would be no better way for the Headbanga to start his debut G1 than by beating the uncrowned IWGP US Champion, but it’s a task far easier said than done.

6th Match: C Block Hiroshi Tanahashi (0-0) vs Aaron Henare (0-0)
Aaron Henare heads into his own first G1 Climax match seeking to take down his biggest target. In transitioning from Hontai to the United Empire in 2021, Henare commented that there was a glass ceiling within the core faction of NJPW, one he felt was installed and maintained by the Ace himself. Carrying a monumental chip on his shoulder ever since, Henare has earned his way into the tournament of tournaments, and now must prove to the world why he belongs. A win over the three time G1 trophy holder would do just that.

5th Match: CHAOS (YOSHI-HASHI, Tomohiro Ishii & Hirooki Goto) vs Los Ingobernables De Japon (BUSHI, Shingo Takagi & Tetsuya Naito)
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With Tetsuya Naito slated to face Hirooki Goto on July 20 in Sendai, and YOSHI-HASHI gearing up for his first league match with Shingo Takagi in Ota on July 23, six man tag team action sees CHAOS battle LIJ. The different schedule a four block format presents makes approaches to multiman tag team previews all the more intriguing, as competitors will decide whether to go all out in a bid to deal pre-tournament damage, or to adopt a more strategic approach. Who makes a big statement in Sapporo?

4th Match: Suzuki-Gun (Lance Archer, Zack Sabre Jr., Taichi & TAKA Michinoku) vs BULLET CLUB (KENTA, Juice Robinson, Bad Luck Fale & Chase Owens)
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Eight man action sees Suzuki-Gun face BULLET CLUB, with implications for night two in Sapporo and night three in Sendai. On Sunday night, Zack Sabre Jr will face KENTA, continuing a G1 rivalry of thrilling matchups, while July 20 will see Bad Luck Fale face Lance Archer in a clash of giants. Archer has never left the Suzuki-Gun fold as evidenced in matches alongside Minoru Suzuki on NJPW STRONG and in AEW, but this will be the first time he’s teamed with ZSJ and Taichi sicne January 6 2020, and the first time he’s been on the same side with TAKA Michinoku since 2019. Can they have a successful reunion tonight?

3rd Match: Tama Tonga, David Finlay & Jado vs HOUSE OF TORTURE (EVIL, Yujiro Takahashi & SHO)
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Not long ago, and in back to back World Tag League finals, David Finlay was a sworn enemy of the Guerrillas of Destiny as he and Juice Robinson battled G.o.D at the top of the tag team mountain. In all the sea changes within BULLET CLUB in 2022 however, Tama Tonga and Jado are out of the group, and Finlay’s former partner Juice Robinson is in, meaning former enemies have become allies for one night at least. In the face of the Hontai squad are the former NEVER 6 Man Champion team of SHO, EVIL and Yujiro Takahashi. As Finlay’s first match opposite Yujiro looms July 20 in Sendai, he’ll be looking to make a statement in his first Japanese match in 16 months.

2nd Match: Toru Yano & Ryohei Oiwa vs TMDK (JONAH & Bad Dude Tito)
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TMDK arrive in Hokkaido in our second match as both JONAH and Bad Dude Tito make their Japanese NJPW debuts. Having more than proven themselves in NJPW STRONG rings, JONAH and Tito may be looking to make a sacrificial lamb of Oiwa en route to showing the Japanese crowds just what they’re capable of. Meanwhile, as Yano is set to face the Top Dig Sunday on night two, the master producer will be looking for any weakness he can possibly exploit in his first group match.

1st Match: Yuto Nakashima & Kosei Fujits vs Team Filthy (Tom Lawlor & Royce Isaacs)
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Team Filthy is another faction looking to score their first mark on the Japanese NJPW scene in our opening bout, as Tom Lawlor teams with Royce Isaacs to face Yuto Nakashima and Kosei Fujita. Nakashima and Fujita’s backgrounds in judo and MMA, and amateur wrestling and grappling respectively are well documented, but can they survive in the face of Lawlor’s formidable experience advantage, and Isaacs’ remarkable power?​
 

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G1 Climax Preview: C Block 【G132】​

The C in Climax stands for C Block?

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As we get set for the start of G1 Climax 32 on July 16, it’s impossible to discount the possibility of our winner coming from C Block this year. With the New Japan Cup winner, former double IWGP Champions and the winningest G1 wrestler of all time in the group, fans definitely need to keep C block circled.

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A Block preview
B Block preview

Hiroshi Tanahashi
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21st entry, 21st consecutive
2007, 2015, 2018 winner. 2004, 2010, 2013 finalist
Career G1 W:L record 91-61-8

An incredible 160 G1 matches, 91 wins, six finals and three trophies across two decades. The winningest wrestler in G1 history, Hiroshi Tanahashi’s resume is never in any doubt. Yet after recent form has seen him to 4-5 records in the last three years, The Ace may also be aware that the time is ticking for him at the very top flight. Winning the IWGP US Championship twice and losing it with no defences, making it to the main event of Forbidden Door but losing the Interim AEW World title to Jon Moxley, it’s been a year of one step forth and one step back in 2022. Can Tanahashi forge the consistency needed to make it through a tough six man block?

KEY MATCH: July 30, Aichi vs Zack Sabre Jr.

Hiroshi Tanahashi and Zack Sabre Jr. have traded wins around the world for five years, and though they haven’t tied up since the autumn of 2020, the Briton has become a key opponent for the Ace, for better and for worse. That last 2020 singles meeting came at the end of a torrid G1 30 campaign for Tanahashi, and represented a key final two points for the Ace to end his campaign on a high.

One year earlier though, a string of battles included what was perhaps a transformative defeat for Tanahashi, when Madison Square Garden saw him verbally submit to Sabre, and put on the injured list immediately afterward. That last defeat came to resemble what Tanahashi admits is the greatest frustration for him in the autumn of his career; failing in his own mind to create a lasting overseas legacy. A fourth trophy, or even a final four appearance, and those hopes will still be alive for Tanahashi; ZSJ is a key piece of that puzzle on July 30.

Hirooki Goto
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15th entry, 15th consecutive
2008 winner, 2016 finalist. NEVER Openweight 6 man Tag Team Champion
Career G1 W:L record: 62-58

It’s been 14 years since the G in G1 stood for Goto, and Hirooki Goto was victorious in his debut year, a feat only matched by a precious few. While Goto has never matched the heights of his debut year, he is a looming threat for any other competitor in the block, having gotten the best of everyone at one point or another. Rejuvenated with his NEVER 6 Man Tag Team Championship win in Korakuen Hall right before tournament start, he’ll be a motivated and dangerous force in C Block.

KEY MATCH: August 16, Budokan vs EVIL
Goto’s last campaign match will be against the King of Darkness in Nippon Budokan. CHAOS and HOUSE OF TORTURE’s issues have stretched all the way through 2022, with CHAOS seemingly gaining come closure from EVIL’s crew with a victory to regain the NEVER Openweight 6 Man Tag Championships at the start of July. Yet EVIL is not done yet, and will be thirsting for dark revenge, as well as what could be a critical two points to move him to the final four.

Tetsuya Naito
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13th entry, 13th consecutive
2013, 2017 winner. 2011 finalist
Career G1 W:L record: 60-47-1

For years now, Tetsuya Naito has been motivated through injury, self doubt and ill fortune with one hope in mind- to give a rousing final role call after a main event in the Tokyo Dome. KENTA’s interference made sure that even in his crowning glory of becoming the first double IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental Champion, that dream was denied him in 2020. In 2021, Kota Ibushi’s January 4 victory made sure it wasn’t in the cards for Naito then, and a knee injury at the hands of Zack Sabre Jr. on night one of G1 Climax 31 denied Naito a 2022 spot. January 4 2023, and Wrestle Kingdom 17 represents all or nothing for Naito, who knows that the mileage on his body means his time in the limelight is limited and fast fading. Unable to wrest gold from Kazuchika Okada earlier in the year, and out to Sabre in the New Japan Cup final, Naito will put it all on the line to come out with his third G1 trophy.

KEY MATCH: August 16, Budokan vs Zack Sabre Jr.
In a six month span, ZSJ denied Naito G1 Climax 31, and the New Japan Cup, both times in Osaka. Back to Tokyo for the last league night then, but any feeling that Naito may have more of an upper hand in the capital, would be mistaken; a victory for ZSJ in final league moments in 2018 in the Budokan putting Naito out of the running that year. Naito needs to defeat a vicious nemesis in Tokyo if he’s to come any closer to his ultimate goal.

EVIL
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7th entry, 7th consecutive
Career G1 W:L Record: 32-22

Since joining BULLET CLUB in 2020, the King of Darkness has had reason to forget the last two G1 Climax tournaments. A reign of terror in 2020 had him within a foreboding grasp of making the finals before being denied by SANADA on the last block match of the tournament, while 2021 saw his momentum similarly crash to a halt at the mighty hands of Jeff Cobb. In 2022, he and the ever present Dick Togo will be looking to ensure the third time is darkly charmed. With cheering set to return to Korakuen Hall at the start of September, how vociferously would EVIL be booed if he walked into the Hall as G1 winner?

KEY MATCH: July 31, Aichi vs Tetsuya Naito
After four singles matches between EVIL and Naito in 2020, the two former LIJ pareja meet for the first time one on one in 18 months in Aichi. EVIL’s rise, defection, reign as double champion and subsequent fall are all connected to the man who brought him into Los Ingobernables De Japon in 2015. Now in 2022, there is a chance for EVIL to once again climb to the top of the mountain by pulling at the heels of El Ingobernable.

KENTA
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4th entry, 4th consecutive
Career G1 W:L record: 16-11

With four victories in his debut year, through five in 2020 to a finals threatening six in 2021, KENTA has been made steady improvements to the point where he is, mathematically at least, capable of going perfect in the block this year. Coming back from severe injuries that took half of the year away from him, KENTA is hungry for his spot, and some two and a half years since he ruined Tetsuya Naito’s Tokyo Dome moment in 2020, he may dedicate himself to preventing El Ingobernable another.

KEY MATCH: August 14, Nagano vs Hiroshi Tanahashi
KENTA and Tanahashi have been at one another’s throats since the BULLET CLUB member’s first G1, and their issues escalated over first the number one contendership to the IWGP US Championship in 2020, and then the belt itself in 2021. That rivalry would come to a head on January 5, where they escalated into a brutal no holds barred streetfight. As he shoved KENTA off a huge ladder in the Tokyo Dome and followed with the Highest Fly Flow of all time, Tanahashi emerged victorious, but it was a pyrrhic victory for the Ace. Hating the lengths he had to go to to defeat KENTA before, Tanahashi wants to beat his foe his own classical way, and KENTA will be working to ensure that does not happen.

Aaron Henare
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Debut entry
Aaron Henare completes a long drive to be included in the G1 Climax, but the work starts here for the Ultimate Weapon. When Henare once joked about being a part of ‘C Block’, outside of consideration for the core twenty of the tournament of tournaments, now he is in C Block as an official entrant, and with a mighty chip on his shoulder. For the United Empire representative, this is a block of death chock full of difficult matches, but that also means it’s chock full of opportunity for Henare.

KEY MATCH: July 16, Sapporo vs Hiroshi Tanahashi
The key match for Henare personally is his first as he faces a former partner in Hiroshi Tanahashi. Since joining the United Empire from Hontai, Henare has talked about banging his head against a glass ceiling within the core establishement of NJPW, and that Tanahashi was the one responsible for installing and maintaining the glass. Breaking through the Ace would be a clear sign of Henare’s career breaking through to the next level, and this match could well be called among, if not the biggest of his career. Can the Ultimate Weapon live up to the task?

Zack Sabre Jr.

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6th entry 6th consecutive 2022 New Japan Cup winner
Career G1 W:L record: 26-19

Completing C Block is this year’s New Japan Cup winner Zack Sabre Jr. While ZSJ’s hopes of a technical wrestling classic with Bryan Danielson at Forbidden Door were denied him, Sabre will now set his sights on earning his position as the most revered technical wrestler on the planet during the G1. We so often see the best from ZSJ at this time of year, but it hasn’t been quite enough to propel him to the finals conversation just yet; although with Tetsuya Naito, Shingo Takagi and Kota Ibushi on his submission list early in 2021, he came as close as ever during his career to date.

KEY MATCH: July 17, Sapporo vs KENTA
Whether two blocks or four, ZSJ always seems to share a drawing with KENTA in the G1, and it always turns out to be one of, if not the best bouts of the tournament. All eyes will be on Sapporo in night two to see how the latest chapter in this mini rivalry continues, with KENTA enjoying a 3-1 advantage over the Briton and a perpetual, near condescending senpai air that comes from him being instrumental in Sabre being introduced to the Japanese landscape in the first place over a decade ago.​