Sumo-November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament Day 12 Results (11/24/22) (Top 2 Tiers)

Here are the quick results from today’s Day 12 of the November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament in Fukuoka:
Key: M-Maegashira, K-Komusubi, S-Sekiwake, O-Ozeki, J-Juryo

Makuuchi (Top Tier):
Onosho (M11) beat Kotoshoho (M11)
Aoiyama (M10) beat Terutsuyoshi (M16)
Chiyoshoma (M10) beat Atamifuji (M15)
Okinoumi (M13) beat Tochinoshin (M8)
Ichiyamamoto (M14) beat Myogiryu (M7)
Azumaryu (M14) beat NIshikigi (M6)
Hiradoumi (M16) beat Hokutofuji (M5)
Takanosho (M9) beat Ura (M3)
Kotoeko (M12) beat Meisei (M2)
Takarafuji (M8) beat Ichinojo )M2)
Takayasu (M1) beat Ryuden (M6)
Kagayaki (M15) beat Kotonowaka (M1)
Wakamotoharu (M4) beat Tobizaru (K)
Endo (M7) beat Tamawashi (K)
Daieisho (K) beat Midorifuji (M3)
Oho (M13) beat Hoshoryu (S)
Abi (M9) beat Wakatakakage (S)
Mitakeumi (S) beat Sadanoumi (M4)
Takakeisho (O) beat Nishikifuji (M5)
Kiribayama (K) beat Shodai (O)
Leader: Oho, Takayasu, Hoshoryu (10-2)
Key matches tomorrow: Oho-Takayasu, Hoshoryu-Takakeisho, Kagayaki-Abi. Oho-Takayasu is for a share of the lead, while Hoshoryu must beat the Ozeki to stay in a tie. The Kagayaki-Abi winner will stay one win back and still with a chance. Also watch Tamawashi-Shodai, if the September champion wins then Shodai will be demoted from Ozeki with 8 losses again.
Reminder: NHK World Japan will have LIVE coverage in English on the final 2 days. Day 14 coverage features 50 minutes of top-tier action beginning Saturday at 3:10 AM ET/12:10 AM PT. Final Day coverage features 90 minutes of action including the final matches with potentially the championship deciding match, post-tournament awards ceremony and champion’s interview with English translations beginning Sunday at 2:30 AM ET/Saturday at 11:30 PM PT. NHK World Japan is available on participating cable/satellite providers and is also available FOR FREE online and on mobile/tablet/smart TV apps. No signup/subscription is required. It can also be watched on YouTube but programming there is limited to hourly news updates and on demand clips.

Juryo:
Gonoyama (J14) beat Enho (J11)
Roga (J13) beat Kaisho (J10)
Daishoho (J9) beat Tokushoryu (J12)
Shimazuumi (J13) bat Shimanoumi (J9)
Kotokuzan (J8) beat Tsushimanada (J14)
Oshoma (J12) beat Akua (J5)
Takakento (J11) beat Chiyonokuni (J5)
Chiyosakai (J10) beat Hidenoumi (J4)
Tsurugisho (J3) beat Yutakayama (J4)
Mitoryu (J3) beat Kinbozan (J7)
Daiamami (J9) beat Churanoumi (J8)
Bushozan (J2) beat Tochimusashi (J7)
Hokuseiho (J6) beat Tohakuryu (J1)
Chiyomaru (J1) beat Kitanowaka (J6)
Leader: Tsurugisho, Akua, Hokuseiho, Oshoma (9-3)
Key matches tomorrow: Tsurugisho-Oshoma, Hokuseiho-Daishoho, Akua-Roga. There are also multiple rikishi at 8-4 so it’s wide open going into the final days.

Asanoyama Watch: As expected, no match today. His final Makushita match should be tomorrow against Kamito, a Makushita 10 at 5-1. Based on what else is happening, a win and a second straight 6-1 tournament should get the former Ozeki from Makushita 4 back to Juryo. But as the Makushita men return to Juryo this weekend, there’s a slight chance of another appearance (no Juryo withdrawals, just guys that have a chance to get there, or who are being promoted there, getting another opportunity). Also tomorrow is the Makushita Championship match between Tamashoho & Mineyaiba, both 6-0. In the lower tiers, Takarefuji can clinch the Jonokuchi Championship tomorrow with a win in his final match. A loss to Oyamazakura (5-1) would mean a 3-way tie for the title to include the Kyokutaisei-Kokiryu winner.

Sumo-November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament Day 11 Results (11/23/22) (Top 2 Tiers)

Here are the quick results from today’s Day 11 of the November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament in Fukuoka:
Key: M-Maegashira, K-Komusubi, S-Sekiwake, O-Ozeki, J-Juryo

Makuuchi (Top Tier):
Kotoeko (M12) beat Ichiyamamoto (M14)
Kotoshoho (M11) beat Azumaryu (M14)
Onosho (M11) beat HIradoumi (M16)
Kagayaki (M15) beat Chiyoshoma (M10)
Abi (M9) beat Oho (M13)
Takanosho (M9) beat Terutsuyoshi (M16)
Tochinoshin (M8) beat Atamifuji (M15)
Takarafuji (M8) beat Okinoumi (M13)
Sadanoumi (M4) beat Aoiyama (M9)
Wakamotoharu (M4) beat Myogiryu (M7)
Endo (M7) beat Ura (M3)
Kotonowaka (M1) beat Ichinojo (M2)
Takayasu (M1) beat Nishikifuji (M5)
Kiribayama (K) beat Ryuden (M6)
Nishikigi (M6) beat Tamawashi (K)
Daieisho (K) beat Meisei (M2)
Midorifuji (M3) beat Tobizaru (K)
Hoshoryu (S) beat Mitakeumi (S)
Shodai (O) beat Wakatakakage (S)
Takakeisho (O) beat Hokutofuji (M5)
Leader: Hoshoryu (10-1)
Key matches tomorrow: Oho-Hoshoryu, Takakeisho-Nishikifuji, Takayasu-Ryuden. If Hoshoryu wins and Takayasu loses, Hoshoryu will have a 2-win advantage with 4 matches left. He’s also now within reach of Ozeki in January as the magic number for potential promotion is down to 12 next time out, and can still go as low as 8.
Of note: No Ozeki promotion for Wakatakakage this time. He needed 11+ wins to have a chance and now can only manage 10. Shodai now needs to go 3-1 to get out of Kadoban and avoid demotion. Finally, with his 8th win today, Kagayaki clinches his first top-tier promotion and winning record in 2 years.

Juryo:
Gonoyama (J14) beat Chiyosakae (J10)
Oshoma (J12) beat Daishoho (J9)
Daiamami (J9) beat Tsushimanada (J14)
Roga (J13) beat Shimanoumi (J8)
Tochimusashi (J7) beat Kaisho (J10)
Shimazuumi (J13) beat Kitanowaka (J6)
Chiyonokuni (J4) beat Tokushoryu (J12)
Takakento (J11) beat Hiradoumi (J4)
Miroryu (J3) beat Yutakayama (J4)
Akua (J5) beat Tsurugisho (J3)
Hokuseiho (J6) beat Bushozan (J2)
Kotokuzan (J8) beat Churanoumi (J2)
Kinbozan (J7) beat Chiyomaru (J1)
Enho (J11) beat Tohakuryu (J1)
Leader: Akua (9-2)
Key match tomorrow: Akua-Oshoma. Akua can take control of the title race with a win, but an Oshoma win can blow it wide open again.

Asanoyama Watch: DENIED! AGAIN! Just like in September, the former Ozeki took a surprise loss in his penultimate match, falling to Tamashoho to drop to 5-1 and out of the Makushita title race. With one match left, a win would leave Asanoyama with a second straight 6-1 performance and should be enough for promotion to Juryo. A loss means 5-2 and a tossup between Juryo and perhaps Makushita 1. It may depend on how those ranked above him finish. Let’s take a look so far with one match to go:
Makushita 1: Shiden, 3-3. Win means promotion to Juryo. Loss means demotion. Shiden reached Juryo in July for the first time but came right back to Makushita because July record was Absent, treated as 0-15. Shonannoumi, 4-2. Despite loss today, will be promoted to Juryo.
Makushita 2: Tsukahara, 2-4. Despite win today, will be demoted. Fujiseiun, 3-3. Lost today so promotion/demotion will go down to the final match. Likely would go to Makushita 1 with win.
Makushita 3: They met today with Tokihayate beating September champion Daiseiryu. Tokihayate goes for 4-3 and promotion on final day, Daiseiryu is demoted at 2-4.
Bottom of Juryo: Gonoyama at J14 is 6-5 and needs to finish 2-2 or better to stay. 1-3 or 0-4 finish would mean demotion back to Makushita. Tsushimanada at J14 is 5-6, he has to finish 3-1 to stay Juryo. At J13, Roga is 6-5 and trying to hang on but Shimazuumi is 4-7 and must win out to avoid demotion. At J11 & 12, Oshoma & Enho have earned promotions but everyone else is at risk of demotion.
So what it looks like is 6-1 almost definitely gets Asanoyama back to Juryo, 5-2 will depend on others. No match tomorrow so we won’t know his final opponent until Day 13 matches are announced.
The Makushita Final will be Tamashoho (Ms23) vs. Mineyaiba (Ms41). A Tamashoho championship gives him a slight chance at reaching Juryo while Mineyaiba would move up to probably Ms11 in January. In the Sandanme, 3 are at 6-0 going into Day 13 so that will possibly go down to the Final Day. The Jonidan final will be Otani vs. Asashiyu, both 6-0, while in Jonokuchi Takerufuji at 6-0 will only need to win his final match for a championship in his Debut.

New Japan 11/23/22 Results

New Japan ran Day 2 of the Super Jr. Tag League today, the 3rd straight event day following yesterday’s World Tag League start as the tournaments alternate events.

Today’s event was held at Arena Tachikawa Tachihi in Tokyo and can be watched on demand on New Japan World.

The announced paid attendance was 849.

Match 1: Oskar Leube & Kosei Fujita beat Ryohei Oiwa & Yuto Nakashima. Fujita pinned Oiwa. First win for Leube!

Match 2: Gedo, Taiji Ishimori, Chase Owens & Bad Luck Fale beat Jado, Master Wato, Tomoaki Honma & Hiroyoshi Tenzan. Owens pinned Jado after C Trigger.

Match 3: El Desperado, Taichi & Lance Archer beat Hiromu Takahashi, Shingo Takagi & Tetsuya Naito by countout. Takagi counted out.

Super Jr. Tag League:
Match 4: Kevin Knight & KUSHIDA beat Dick Togo & Sho. KUSHIDA pinned Togo with a hanmerlock suplex hold.
Match 5: Titan & BUSHI beat Clark Connors & Ryusuke Taguchi. Titan pinned Taguchi after Angel Immortar.
Match 6: Lio Rush & Yoh beat Tiger Mask & Robbie Eagles. Yoh pinned TM 4 after 3K.
Match 7: Chris Bey & Ace Austin beat DOUKI & Yoshinobu Kanemaru. Austin pinned DOUKI after The Fold.
Main Event: Francesco Akira & TJP beat El Lindaman & Alex Zayne. TJP pinned Zayne.
After 2 days United Empire & Bullet Club are 2-0, 4 points and tied for the lead.

The next event is Friday at Kiryu Municipal Gym in Gunma for Day 3. Live streaming on New Japan World will begin at 1:30 AM PT/4:30 AM ET. The World Tag League continues Saturday.

Also, following up on rumors for yesterday, NEVER Openweight Champion Karl Anderson vs. Hikuleo for the title has been announced for 12/14. It was scheduled for 11/5 but Anderson no-showed due to re-signing with WWE and instead being at a WWE event in Saudi Arabia that day.

Pro Wrestling NOAH 11/23/22 Results

Pro Wrestling NOAH ran NOAH THE BEST 2022 today, a mid-major standalone event that likely will be the last such event for the promotion this year as December’s light schedule will mainly feature special themed events.

Today’s event was held at Yoyogi National Stadium Gym 2 in Tokyo and can be watched on demand on WRESTLE UNIVERSE in Japanese (may not yet be available as it was an ABEMA live broadcast) and English. You can also watch the first 3 matches FOR FREE on YouTube for a limited time.

The announced paid attendance was 872.

Match 1: Mohammed Yone & Akitoshi Saito beat Tadasuke & Hi69. Saito pinned Hi69 after Iron Claw Slam.

Match 2: Hideki Suzuki beat Shuhei Taniguchi by ref stoppage (TKO).

Match 3: FINAL PERROS DE MAL DE JAPON: Yoshinari Ogawa, Yasutaka Yano & Kai Fujimura vs. NOSAWA Rongai, Eita & Super Crazy went to a double countout. It went just 65 seconds. Which led to…
Yoshinari Ogawa, Yasutaka Yano & Kai Fujimura vs. NOSAWA Rongai, Eita & Super Crazy went to a double countout. It went just 53 seconds. Which led to…
Yoshinari Ogawa, Yasutaku Yano & Kai Fujimura beat NOSAWA Rongai, Eita & Super Crazy by DQ. NOSAWA DQ’d. Ref assault.

Match 4: Jack Morris beat Daiki Inaba.

Match 5: Naomichi Marufuji, Masaaki Mochizuki & Masato Tanaka beat Takashi Sugiura, Kazuyuki Fujita & Timothy Thatcher. Marufuji pinned Sugiura.

Match 6: AMAKUSA & Alejandro beat Dante Leon & YO-HEY. AMAKUSA pinned Leon.

Match 7: Kaito Kiyomiya, Satoshi Kojima & Masa Kitamiya beat Kenoh, Katsuhiko Nakajima & Manabu Soya. Kiyomiya pinned Kenoh after Transformed Shining Wizard.

Match 8: Atsushi Kotoge & Seiki Yoshioka beat GHC Jr. Heavyweight Tag Team Champions Shuji Kondo & Hajime Ohara to win the titles. Kotoge & Yoshioka become the 53rd GHC Jr. Heavyweight Tag Team Champions. Kotoge pinned Ohara after Kill Switch.

Main Event: GHC National Champion Hijo de Dr. Wagner Jr. beat Yoshiki Inamura to retain the title. V1 for Wagner Jr.

The next event is 12/14 at Aizuwakamatsu City Gym in Fukushima, continuing the never-ending SUNNY VOYAGE 2022 Tour, which will continue into 2023. Broadcast plans TBA.

In upcoming event news/fallout from today, 2 title matches are set for the year-ending N INNOVATION event on 12/23: Kotoge & Yoshioka will defend the Jr. Tag Team Titles against YO-HEY & Kzy (Dragon Gate), and GHC Jr. Heavyweight Champion Dante Leon vs. AMAKUSA (formerly Haoh) for the title is also set. 12/18 will be a Kongo produced event, 12/20 will be a Tokyo Gurentai Produced Independent event, possibly the final farewell to the iconic heel faction led by NOSAWA Rongai that dates back to the 1990s, and a GHC Heavyweight Tag Team Championship has been added to 1/1…and it’s gonna be a big blast from the past as Takashi Sugiura & Satoshi Kojima defend against Naomichi Marufuji and…KENTA!!! Let’s keep that New Japan-NOAH crossover door wide open!

And finally, the January & February 2023 schedule was announced. After the New Year event on 1/1, the 2023 campaign begins with a same-day doubleheader on 1/8 at Korakuen Hall, then the SUNNY VOYAGE 2023 Tour continues with two events in January & February after Keiji Muto’s Farewell Event…or is it? Might not be because Muto will appear at GREAT VOYAGE 2023 in OSAKA on 2/12 at Osaka Prefectural Gym-although the plan is he will only be a guest and not participating. And the also-never ending STAR NAVIGATION 2022-23 your continues in February.

BREAKING: TJPW Title Match Change…AND…

Tokyo Joshi Pro has announced a change to a title match at ALL RISE ’22 this weekend-the Princess Tag Team Championship match has been changed because challenger Raku is now off. Coronavirus. She was to have teamed with Yuki Aino to challenge Yuki Arai & Saki Akai for the titles. Pom Harajuku is the replacement and the match will now be her 4th Anniversary match (her debut was today Japan time in 2018) AND the first career title shot for the comedy wrestler.

AND…a huge announcement for March…GRAND PRINCESS ’23! TJPW’s Ariake Arena debut! They will visit the new Olympic venue in Tokyo for the first time on March 18, 2023, about a year to the date after their Ryogoku Kokugikan debut for their biggest event to date. They plan to run the venue at 50% capacity.

Sumo-November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament Day 10 Results (11/22/22) (Top 2 Tiers)

Here are the quick results from today’s Day 10 of the November 2022 Grand Sumo Tournament in Fukuoka:
Key: M-Maegashira, K-Komusubi, S-Sekiwake, O-Ozeki, J-Juryo
Makuuchi (Top Tier):
Azumaryu (M14) beat Kotoeko (M12)
Onosho (M11) beat Ichiyamamoto (M14)
Hiradoumi (M10) beat Kotoshoho (M11)
Oho (M13) beat Aoiyama (M10)
Okinoumi (M13) beat Takanosho (M9)
Chiyoshoma (M10) beat Takarafuji (M8)
Tochinoshin (M8) beat Terutsuyoshi (M16)
Endo (M7) beat Atamifuji (M15)
Kagayaki (M15) beat Myogiryu (M7)
Ryuden (M6) beat Abi (M9)
Ura (M3) beat NIshikigi (M6)
Meisei (M2) beat Hokutofuji (M5)
NIshikifuji (M5) beat Ichinojo (M2)
Tamawashi (K) beat Wakamotoharu (M4)
Kotonowaka (M1) beat Daieisho (K)
Takayasu (M1) beat Tobizaru (K)
Midorifuji (M3) beat Mitakeumi (S)
Wakatakakage (S) beat Sadanoumi (M4)
Takakeisho (O) beat Kiribayama (K)
Hoshoryu (S) beat Shodai (O)
Leader: Hoshoryu, Oho (9-1).
Of note: Mitakeumi’s quest to regain Ozeki rank this time is over. He needed at least 10 wins and now can only finish with 9 at most. Shodai is now two losses from demotion himself and must finish 4-1 to get out of Kadoban status. Wakatakakage still has a chance at Ozeki consideration if he can win his last 5 matches.
Tomorrow’s key matches: Oho vs. Abi and Hoshoryu vs. Mitakeumi
Also, a correction from yesterday-I mentioned that Hoshoryu was the grandson of former Yokozuna Asashoryu. Hoshoryu is actually the nephew of Asashoryu.

Juryo:
Enho (J11) beat Shimazuumi (J13)
Takakento (J11) beat Chiyosakae (J10)
Daiamami (J9) beat Gonoyama (J14)
Daishoho (J9) beat Tsushimanada (J14)
Shimanoumi (J8) beat Kaisho (J10)
Roga (J13) beat Kotokuzan (J80
Tochimusashi (J7) beat Tokushoryu (J12)
Oshoma (J12) beat Kinbozan (J7)
Kitanowaka (J6) beat Hidenoumi (J4)
Mitoryu (J3) beat Akua (J5)
Tsurugisho (J3) beat Churanoumi (J2)
Bushozan (J2) beat Yutakayama (J4)
Tohakuryu (J1) beat Chiyonokuni (J5)
Hokuseiho (J6) beat Chiyomaru (J1)
Leader: Akua, Tsurugisho (8-2)
Key match tomorrow: Akua vs. Tsurigusho. The winner is in control of the championship lead. The loser still has a chance though.

Asanoyama Watch: As expected, no match today. The former Ozeki faces fellow unbeaten Tamashoho, currently at Makushita 23, for another chance at a championship and almost certainly promotion to Juryo. Who the winner will face for the title won’t be known until the other 2 5-0 rikishi face off on Day 12. The championship match likely will be on Day 13.
In the lower tiers, which are already underway on Day 12 as of this post, Takerufuji has all but won the Jonokuchi championship after beating fellow unbeaten Kyokutaisei. Takerufuji will only need to win his final match for the title in his Debut tournament. Both are headed for the Jonidan in January.

BREAKING: NEVER Title Defense Possibly Set (Updated)

Following up on the drama the last couple months between New Japan and NEVER Openweight Champion Karl Anderson refusing to defend the title earlier this month, the next defense may be set. Anderson posted a video on Instagram today announcing he will return to New Japan on 12/14 in Sendai to defend the title. That’s the current tour-ender date with the World Tag League & Super Jr. Tag League Finals. We should hear something definite from New Japan soon, maybe late tonight US time, and then maybe find out if Hikuleo will still get his chance at the title per the original plan.

This all started in October when Anderson and Doc Gallows returned to, and subsequently re-signed with, WWE after Anderson was announced foe the 11/5 New Japan event. Anderson announced he would instead be at the WWE event in Saudi Arabia that day despite the prior commitment to New Japan. The promotion threatened to strip Anderson of the title but didn’t and Hikuleo instead faced (and beat) Yujiro Takahashi.

More as it becomes available.

UPDATE: It’s now official. Anderson-Hikuleo for the title will happen on 12/14.

New Japan 11/22/22 Results

New Japan kicked off the 2022 World Tag League today, the promotion’s traditional year-end tag team tournament. This event is for Heavyweight Tag Teams and likely will award a title shot at Tokyo Dome to the winners, assuming they can get All Elite Wrestling to allow FTR to go to Japan that day.

Today’s event was held at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo and can be watched on demand on New Japan World.

The announced paid attendance was 700, a legit advance sellout. Vocal cheering was allowed again.

Match 1: Ryohei Oiwa beat Yuto Nakashima.

Match 2: Tomoaki Honma & Togi Makabe beat Oskar Leube & Kosei Fujita. Makabe pinned Leube after a King Kong kneedrop.

Match 3: BUSHI, Hiromu Takahashi & Shingo Takagi vs. DOUKI, El Desperado & Taichi went to a double countout.

World Tag League:
Match 4: Shane Haste & Mikey Nicholls beat Gabriel Kidd & Alex Coughlin. Nicholls pinned Kidd after Thunder Valley.
Match 5: Lance Archer (All Elite Wrestling) & Minoru Suzuki beat Chase Owens & Bad Luck Fale. Archer pinned Owens after Blackout.
Match 6: YOSHI-HASHI & Hirooki Goto beat Yujiro Takahashi & EVIL. Goto pinned Takahashi.
Match 7: Aussie Open beat Toru Yano & Hiroshi Tanahashi. Kyle Fletcher pinned Yano after Corealis.
Main Event: SANADA & Tetsuya Naito beat Aaron Henare & Great-O-Khan. Naito pinned Henare after Destino.

Day 2 is Friday. The next event is Super Jr. Tag League Day 2 tomorrow at Arena Tachikawa Tachihi in Tokyo. Live streaming on New Japan World will begin at 1 AM PT/4 AM ET.

BREAKING: DDT Title Vacated

DDT has announced that the KO-D Tag Team Championship is now VACANT. Previous champions Kazusada Higuchi & Naomi Yoshimura have been forced to vacate the titles because Yoshimura was injured during his match on 11/18. Herniated disc in his neck. Out indefinitely but at least a few months. No word yet on plans for crowning new champions.

More as it becomes available.

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