10 Matches For The Ultimate NJPW Vs. AEW Supercard

The King Of Sports Vs. The Revolution.

By Michael Sidgwick /

It isn’t going to happen.

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New Japan Pro Wrestling is still furious with Impact Wrestling stemming from long-held animosity with “F*cking Jeff Jarrett” and the mistreatment of top prospect Kazuchika Okada. That Okada has since become either the best wrestler on the planet—or the greatest of all-time—does not matter. The cultural values of stubborn loyalty have scuppered any chance of a renewed working relationship. The AXS TV deal might force something, but not out of choice. The formation of AEW has scuppered also NJPW’s western expansion, and that has a far more appreciable business impact.

It should happen; the Ring Of Honor relationship means nothing to New Japan at this point, and the pull of AEW is such that a jointly-promoted card is sure to sell out a major arena. Indirectly, it already has: the vast majority of those who purchased G1 Supercard tickets did so under the impression—evidenced by a weak secondary market—that the Elite would appear.

AEW, meanwhile, will run dry of novelty in the months and years to come. Striking a deal with NJPW is something NXT simply cannot (or will not) hold to their advantage in this “war”.

It isn’t going to happen.

But if it did…

10. Jungle Boy & Luchasaurus Vs. Guerrillas Of Destiny

A great dynamic that doesn’t threaten to steal a show that would require herculean energy from the crowd to generate graduating heat, this is the opener: a match between a very beloved tag team and their despised, broken mirror image.

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Tama Tonga and Tonga Loa are hated by fans for reasons sought and otherwise: when they’re in the mood, or across the ring from the right opponents, they can whip up an earned reaction with nasty, charismatic heel work. Or, they just do sub-WWE heel trolololol bullsh*t that generates groans, and not jeers.

Either version of the act works wonderfully in contrast to the most wholesome and popular double act in AEW: the prospect of Tama bullying Jungle Boy—viciously or lazily—only to be confronted by Luchasaurus and his boy-popping retribution spot is both awesome and long overdue.

Tama Tonga is a complete d*ck, he’s tanked several major New Japan cards just as they built to the crescendo that makes a five-hour show so watchable, and only a 6’ 5” karate-kicking dinosaur can restore the karmic balance.

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