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Clímax G1

Trofeo Climax G1

El G1 (Grade One) Climax ( G1(グレードワン)クライマックス, Gurēdo Wan Kuraimakkusu ) es un torneo de lucha libre profesional que se lleva a cabo cada agosto por la promoción New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). Aunque a veces se ha celebrado como un torneo de eliminación simple , normalmente (y actualmente) se lleva a cabo como un torneo de todos contra todos , con los luchadores más victoriosos en cada grupo luchando en un torneo corto para decidir el ganador de ese año. Desde 2012, el ganador del torneo gana el derecho a desafiar por el Campeonato Mundial Peso Pesado de IWGP en el espectáculo Wrestle Kingdom del siguiente enero .

En su formato actual, el torneo dura cuatro semanas. El ganador de cada grupo se determina mediante un sistema de puntos: dos puntos por victoria, un punto por empate y cero puntos por derrota o nulidad. En el formato actual, las decisiones dobles (como doble conteo fuera de juego o doble descalificación) se consideran empates.

Historial del torneo

Hiroshi Tanahashi sostiene su premio por ganar el G1 Climax 2015, un contrato para un combate por el Campeonato Peso Pesado de IWGP en Wrestle Kingdom 10 en el Tokyo Dome

NJPW tuvo un torneo anual desde 1974 bajo varios nombres: Liga Mundial (ワールドリーグ戦, Wārudorīgu-sen ) (1974-1977, basado en el torneo de la Liga Mundial (Grande) de la antigua Asociación Japonesa de Lucha Libre celebrado entre 1959 y 1972); [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] la Liga MSG ( MSGシリーズ, MSG shirīzu ) (1978-1982); [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] la Liga IWGP ( IWGPリーグ戦, IWGP rīgu-sen ) (1983-1988), "IWGP" es el acrónimo del organismo rector de NJPW, el Gran Premio Internacional de Lucha Libre (インターナショナル・レスリング・グラン・プリ, intānashonaru resuringu guran puri ). La mayoría de estos torneos estuvieron dominados por la principal estrella fundadora de NJPW, Antonio Inoki .

Aunque el ganador de 1983, Hulk Hogan , recibió un cinturón de campeonato , este no es el comienzo del Campeonato Peso Pesado de la IWGP , sino su versión temprana que se defendía anualmente contra el ganador de la Liga IWGP del año. El Campeonato Peso Pesado de la IWGP actual llegó recién en 1987, reemplazando a la versión anterior. [11]

En 1989, hubo un Torneo de Copa del Mundo (ワールドカップ争奪リーグ戦, Wārudokappu sōdatsu rīgu-sen ) , en el que participaron luchadores de la entonces Unión Soviética . [5] [12] No se celebró ningún torneo en 1990.

Con el dominio de Inoki sobre NJPW desaparecido, la promoción estableció el torneo G1 Climax en 1991 como una plataforma para mostrar a los pesos pesados ​​más importantes de la compañía y hacerlos competir en combates de todos contra todos donde los ganadores de las dos divisiones se enfrentarían en la final del torneo. El entonces presidente de NJPW, Seiji Sakaguchi, nombró el torneo en honor a la carrera de caballos G1 . [13] Aunque se considera una continuación de los torneos anteriores, [5] oficialmente NJPW no reconoce los torneos anteriores como parte del linaje G1 Climax. [14] El primer G1 se celebró del 7 al 11 de agosto de 1991 en el Ryōgoku Kokugikan de Tokio . El ganador del torneo, asumiendo que aún no es el campeón, tradicionalmente se ha ganado una oportunidad por el Campeonato Peso Pesado de IWGP. Desde 2012, el ganador obtiene el "certificado de derechos de desafío del Campeonato Peso Pesado IWGP del Tokyo Dome", un contrato para una oportunidad por el título en el evento más grande de NJPW, Wrestle Kingdom en el Tokyo Dome , que se lleva a cabo anualmente el 4 de enero. Al igual que el contrato Money in the Bank de la WWE , el certificado se guarda en un maletín que el luchador debe defender hasta fin de año. [15] [16] Desde su inicio, el contrato solo cambió de manos una vez, el 7 de noviembre de 2020, en Power Struggle cuando Jay White derrotó a Kota Ibushi . En 2021, el ahora retirado cinturón del Campeonato Peso Pesado IWGP fue entregado al ganador de G1 Kazuchika Okada en lugar de un maletín. En 2015, el formato del torneo se cambió y NJPW redujo la cantidad de combates G1 Climax por programa, lo que les dio a los luchadores participantes más tiempo para descansar entre combates. Esto aumentó la duración del torneo a cuatro semanas. [17] En 2016, Kenny Omega se convirtió en el primer luchador no japonés en ganar el torneo.

El torneo G1 Climax se ha utilizado a menudo como una plataforma para que NJPW impulse a sus estrellas en ascenso. Las victorias de los jóvenes prometedores sobre las leyendas japonesas generalmente llevarían sus respectivas carreras a nuevas alturas. El primer torneo fue creado específicamente para convertir en estrellas a Keiji Mutoh , Masahiro Chono y Shinya Hashimoto , tres luchadores de NJPW que acababan de regresar a la promoción de sus excursiones de aprendizaje en el extranjero. [13] Los ganadores anteriores incluyen a Mutoh, Chono, Hashimoto, Yuji Nagata , Hiroshi Tanahashi y otros que se han convertido en superestrellas de la lucha libre.

A diferencia de la New Japan Cup , el G1 Climax cuenta con el entonces actual Campeón Peso Pesado de la IWGP como uno de los participantes, excepto en 1992, 2001, 2004 y 2008, cuando los entonces campeones Riki Choshu (en 1992), Kazuyuki Fujita (en 2001 y 2004) y Keiji Mutoh (en 2008), respectivamente, no compitieron en el torneo. A menudo etiquetado como favorito para ganar el torneo, el Campeón Peso Pesado de la IWGP ha llegado a la final cinco veces, la primera fue en 1995 cuando Keiji Mutoh ganó el torneo. Mutoh repetiría esta hazaña nuevamente en 1999, pero perdería la final ante Manabu Nakanishi . Otros campeones reinantes en llegar a la final incluyen a Kensuke Sasaki en 2000, Kazuyuki Fujita en 2005 y Yuji Nagata en 2007. Mutoh y Sasaki son los únicos dos luchadores que han ganado el G1 Climax mientras tenían el Campeonato Peso Pesado de IWGP. [18] En general, Antonio Inoki tiene el récord de más victorias en torneos con diez, mientras que Masahiro Chono con sus cinco victorias tiene el récord de más victorias en torneos bajo su nombre G1 Climax. Hiroyoshi Tenzan ha participado en el torneo G1 Climax un récord de 21 veces.

La noche de apertura del G1 Climax 2019 tuvo lugar en Dallas, Texas, lo que marcó la primera vez que la noche de apertura tuvo lugar fuera de Japón. [19]

Las finales del G1 Climax 2020 se llevaron a cabo en octubre debido a que los Juegos Olímpicos de Verano originalmente estaban destinados a celebrarse en Tokio , cuando normalmente se lleva a cabo el torneo, lo que hace que esta sea la primera vez que el torneo se lleva a cabo en otoño. [20]

El partido más largo en la historia del torneo fue el de Kota Ibushi contra Sanada en la final de 2020 , con 35 minutos y 12 segundos. El partido más largo con un ganador decisivo en la etapa de bloques del torneo fue el de Sanada contra Kazuchika Okada en el torneo de 2019, con 29 minutos y 47 segundos, 13 segundos por debajo del límite de tiempo de 30 minutos. Por el contrario, el partido más corto fue el de Hirooki Goto contra Toru Yano en el torneo de 2020, con solo 18 segundos.

Lista de ganadores

Certificado de derechos de desafío del Campeonato Peso Pesado IWGP del Tokyo Dome

Liga mundial

1974

La Liga Mundial de 1974 se desarrolló del 5 de abril al 8 de mayo de 1974 y no tiene relación con el G1 Climax que comenzó en 1991. El torneo comenzó con 16 luchadores, ocho japoneses y ocho internacionales, ubicados en grupos según corresponda. Todos los partidos de la primera ronda incluyeron a los japoneses contra los internacionales. Los cuatro primeros finalistas de ambos grupos avanzaron a una segunda ronda de competencia de todos contra todos. [1] [27]

1975

La Liga Mundial de 1975 se desarrolló del 4 de abril al 16 de mayo de 1975. El torneo contó con 16 luchadores, pero se abolió el formato de Locales contra Internacionales. Los cinco primeros clasificados avanzaron a una ronda eliminatoria, y el mejor clasificado recibió un pase directo a la final. [2] [27]


1976

La Liga Mundial de 1976 se desarrolló del 2 de abril al 11 de mayo de 1976. El torneo contó con la participación de 14 luchadores. El mejor clasificado avanzó a la final del torneo, donde se enfrentará al ganador de una ronda semifinal de tres luchadores. [3] [27]


1977

La Liga Mundial de 1977 se desarrolló del 21 de abril al 30 de mayo de 1977. El torneo contó con la participación de 11 luchadores. [4] [27]

Liga MSG

1978

La Liga MSG de 1978 se desarrolló del 21 de abril al 30 de mayo de 1978. El torneo contó con nueve luchadores. [6] [27]

1979

La Liga MSG de 1979 se desarrolló del 27 de abril al 7 de junio de 1979. El torneo contó con 10 luchadores. [7] [27]

1980

La Liga MSG de 1980 se desarrolló del 25 de abril al 5 de junio de 1980. El torneo contó con 10 luchadores. [8] [27]

1981

La Liga MSG de 1981 se desarrolló del 8 de mayo al 4 de junio de 1981. El torneo contó con 11 luchadores. [9] [27]

1982

La Liga MSG de 1982 se desarrolló del 4 de marzo al 1 de abril de 1982. El torneo contó con la participación de 14 luchadores. [10] [27]

† Antonio Inoki se lesionó y no pudo competir en la final. Killer Khan, el siguiente mejor clasificado, ocupó su lugar.

Liga IWGP

1983

La Liga del Campeonato Internacional de Lucha Libre Grand Prix de 1983 se desarrolló del 6 de mayo al 2 de junio de 1983. El torneo contó con 10 luchadores. [21] [27] El ganador recibió un cinturón de campeonato (el Campeonato Peso Pesado IWGP original ) defendido anualmente contra el ganador de la Liga IWGP del año). [11]

1984

La Liga de Campeones del Grand Prix Internacional de Lucha Libre de 1984 se desarrolló del 11 de mayo al 14 de junio de 1984. El torneo contó con 12 luchadores y fue la primera vez que el torneo no contó con ningún tipo de ronda final. [22] [27]

1985

La IWGP Champion Series se desarrolló del 10 de mayo al 15 de junio de 1985. El torneo contó con 13 luchadores y fue de eliminación simple. Esta fue la primera vez que el torneo no contó con un sistema de puntos. [23] [27]

1986

El Grand Prix Internacional de Lucha Libre de 1986 se celebró del 16 de mayo al 19 de junio de 1986. El torneo contó con el regreso del sistema de puntos, con 14 luchadores en dos bloques de siete cada uno. Los dos primeros de cada bloque avanzaron a una etapa eliminatoria. [24] [27] El ganador ganó el Campeonato Peso Pesado IWGP vacante (versión original) . [11]

1987

El Grand Prix Internacional de Lucha Libre de 1987 se celebró del 11 de mayo al 12 de junio de 1987. El torneo contó con 14 luchadores en dos bloques de siete cada uno. Los mejores finalistas de cada bloque avanzaron a la final, y el ganador se convirtió en el primer Campeón Peso Pesado de la IWGP . Tatsumi Fujinami se perdió el torneo debido a una lesión que sufrió en la gira de la IWGP Champion Series , pero actuó como comentarista de la lucha final. [25] [27]

1988

El Gran Premio Internacional de Lucha Libre de 1988 se desarrolló del 15 al 29 de julio de 1988. El torneo contó con cinco luchadores en un solo bloque, y el ganador se convirtió en el contendiente número uno al Campeón Peso Pesado IWGP Tatsumi Fujinami para el 8 de agosto. [26]

Torneo de la Copa del Mundo

1989

El Torneo de la Copa Mundial de 1989 se celebró del 24 de noviembre al 7 de diciembre de 1989. El torneo contó con 20 luchadores en cuatro bloques de cinco cada uno. [5] [12]

Clímax G1

1991

El G1 Climax inaugural fue un torneo de todos contra todos que consistió en dos bloques de cuatro hombres y se desarrolló del 7 al 11 de agosto de 1991. [27] [28]

1992

El G1 Climax de 1992 fue un torneo de eliminación simple de 16 hombres , y también fue por el vacante Campeonato Mundial Peso Pesado de la NWA . Se desarrolló del 6 al 12 de agosto de 1992. [27] [30] Terry Taylor avanzó a los cuartos de final, debido a una lesión en el hombro sufrida por su oponente programado Hiroshi Hase el 3 de agosto. [80]

1993

El G1 Climax de 1993 fue una vez más un torneo de eliminación simple de 16 hombres, celebrado del 3 al 7 de agosto de 1993. NJPW invitó a varios luchadores no pertenecientes a NJPW a participar en el torneo de 1993, incluidos Hiromichi Fuyuki , Ashura Hara , Takashi Ishikawa y The Great Kabuki de WAR , y Yoshiaki Fujiwara de Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Gumi . [27] [31] [81]

1994

El G1 Climax de 1994 volvió al formato de todos contra todos, esta vez con dos bloques de seis. Se celebró del 3 al 7 de agosto de 1994. Entre los nativos invitados se encontraban Yoshiaki Fujiwara de Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Gumi y Yoshiaki Yatsu de Social Progress Wrestling Federation (SPWF). [27] [32]

1995

The 1995 G1 Climax was another eight-man round-robin tournament held August 11 to August 15, with the addition that the top two scorers from each block would advance to a four-man mini-tournament to decide the winner. Masahiro Chono advanced out of his block despite being tied with Ric Flair because of his faster match winning time over Shiro Koshinaka.[27][33]

1996

The 1996 G1 Climax was held from August 2 to August 6, 1996, and was a round-robin tournament featuring two blocks of five.[27][34] Junji Hirata suffered an injury during his match with Kensuke Sasaki, which caused him to forfeit his remaining matches.

1997

The 1997 G1 Climax was a 14-man single-elimination tournament, with Kensuke Sasaki and Buff Bagwell receiving byes to the quarterfinals. The tournament was held from August 1 to August 3.[27][35]

1998

The 1998 G1 Climax was another 16-man single-elimination tournament, held between July 31 and August 2. Genichiro Tenryu, who had separated from his own WAR promotion to become a freelancer since early in the year, was invited.[27][36]

1999

The 1999 G1 Climax was a 12-man round-robin tournament, held from August 10 to August 15. This was the first of two years (with 2000) where head-to-head tiebreakers did not decide numerical ties; the winner of Block A was decided by tiebreaker matches, even when there was a clear winner in the two participants' league match.[27][37]

2000

The 2000 G1 Climax was a round-robin tournament, featuring four blocks of five, with each block champion advancing to a four-man tournament to decide that year's winner; it was held from August 7 to August 13. Also note that the points system was modified from the original: 1 point for a victory, and zero points for a draw or loss. Additionally, head-to-head tiebreakers did not decide numerical ties; the winners of Block A and Block C were decided by tiebreaker matches, even though there was a clear winner in the two participants' league match. This was the first time that two recognized junior heavyweights; IWGP titleholder Tatsuhito Takaiwa and previous champion Jyushin Thunder Liger, were invited to compete in the heavyweight tournament.[38]

2001

The 2001 G1 Climax was a two-block, twelve-man round-robin tournament held from August 4 to August 12. It returned to the original method of scoring, and also reintroduced the 1995 G1's format of each block's top two scorers advancing to the final four. Jyushin Thunder Liger and Minoru Tanaka were the junior heavyweight invitees.[39]

2002

The 2002 G1 Climax was identical in structure to the previous year's, and was held from August 3 to August 11.[38]

2003

The 2003 G1 Climax was another 12-man round-robin tournament, held from August 10 to August 17. Jun Akiyama from Pro Wrestling Noah, along with freelancer Yoshihiro Takayama were invitees.[41]

2004

The 2004 G1 Climax was a two-block, sixteen-man tournament held from August 7 to August 15. As well as the increased number of participants, it introduced a format in which the second and third runners-up from each block would advance to a four-man tournament, the two finalists of which would advance to a second four-man tournament also featuring each block winner; the eventual winner of this tournament would win the G1 Climax. Also, it would seem that, for this particular year, matches which ended in a double countout or double disqualification would result in zero points for both competitors.[42]

1 This was a double countout, and so neither Chono nor Nakamura received any points.

2005

The 2005 G1 Climax was another 16-man round-robin tournament, held from August 4 to August 14. It returned to the format of 2003, eliminating the "quarterfinals" seen in 2004, and simply bringing each block's top two scorers into the final four.[43]

2006

The 2006 G1 Climax was a 10-man round-robin tournament held from August 6 to August 13.[44]

2007

The 2007 G1 Climax, featuring twelve men in two blocks, was held from August 5 to August 12.[45]

2008

The 2008 G1 Climax, featuring fourteen men in two blocks, was held from August 9 to August 17 over seven shows.[46]

2009

The 2009 G1 Climax, featuring fourteen men in two blocks, was held from August 7 to August 16 over eight shows. In a tournament first, the exact tie for first place in Block A between Togi Makabe and Hiroshi Tanahashi was decided by a coin toss.[47]

2010

The 2010 version of the G1 Climax tournament was announced in late May 2010 and was the 20th anniversary of the G1 Climax tournament. The tournament took place over eight shows between August 6 and August 15, 2010.[82][83][84] Naomichi Marufuji was scheduled to participate in the tournament, but was forced to pull out after suffering an arm injury on July 25.[85] On August 5, NJPW announced that Prince Devitt would replace Marufuji in the tournament.[86] With his victory, freelancer Satoshi Kojima became the third man to have won both the G1 Climax and All Japan Pro Wrestling's Champion Carnival.

2011

The 2011 version of the G1 Climax tournament was announced on May 3, 2011. It took place over ten shows between August 1 and August 14 and included 20 participants, making it at the time the largest G1 Climax in history.[94][95]

2012

The 2012 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place over nine shows between August 1 and August 12 and included 18 participants.[105][106] The 24-year-old Kazuchika Okada went on to become the youngest G1 Climax winner in history, breaking the previous record held by the then 27-year-old Masahiro Chono.[50] Okada also became the first winner since Hirooki Goto to win the tournament in his first attempt.[50] Karl Anderson became the first foreigner to make it to the final of the tournament since Rick Rude in 1992.[107]

2013

The 2013 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place over nine shows between August 1 and August 11 and included 20 participants.[116][117] In an unprecedented move, NJPW broadcast all nine events live on internet pay-per-view (iPPV) through Niconico and Ustream.[118] On August 8, NJPW announced that Hirooki Goto and Hiroyoshi Tenzan had suffered jaw and rib fractures respectively and would both miss the rest of the tournament.[119]

2014

The 2014 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place between July 21 and August 10 with the final taking place in Tokorozawa, Saitama at the Seibu Dome for the first time departing Ryōgoku Kokugikan, which housed the final from every year since the tournament began.[128] With 22 participants, the tournament marked the largest G1 Climax in history. Like the previous year, all events in the tournament were made available on iPPV through Niconico and Ustream.[129] Kota Ibushi was scheduled to take part in the tournament, but on July 18 NJPW announced that he would have to pull out due to a concussion suffered at the beginning of the month.[130] The following day, Tomoaki Honma was named Ibushi's replacement in the tournament.[131]

2015

The 2015 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place between July 20 and August 16. Taking place over 19 shows, it was the longest G1 Climax in history.[143] The final three days took place back at Ryōgoku Kokugikan.[144] Participants in the tournament were announced on June 7.[145] For the tournament, NJPW introduced a new format, where each show would only include five tournament matches all from the same block, giving the other participants more time to rest.[17] Shinsuke Nakamura injured his left elbow in his second match, forcing him to forfeit his third match against Michael Elgin.[146]

2016

The 2016 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place between July 18 and August 14.[165] On June 27, NJPW announced the participants, which included two outsiders; Pro Wrestling Noah's Katsuhiko Nakajima and Naomichi Marufuji.[166] Originally, former three-time G1 Climax winner and the wrestler with the most G1 Climax appearances, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, was left out of the tournament. However, on July 3, Tenzan's longtime tag team partner Satoshi Kojima gave him his spot in the tournament.[167] Afterwards, Tenzan confirmed this would be his last G1 Climax.[168] In the final, Canadian Kenny Omega made history, becoming the first non-Japanese winner of the tournament under its G1 Climax name as well as the first man in four years to win the tournament in his first attempt.[54]

2017

The 2017 version of the G1 Climax tournament took place between July 17 and August 13. Prior to the tournament, NJPW held two "G1 Special" shows in Long Beach, California on July 1 and 2.[187] On June 20, NJPW announced the participants in the tournament, which included one outsider: freelancer Kota Ibushi, competing in his third G1. Juice Robinson and Zack Sabre Jr. took part in their first G1 Climax tournament, while Yuji Nagata took part in his 19th and final tournament.[188] The final match between Kenny Omega and Tetsuya Naito became the longest match in G1 Climax history,[189] breaking the previous record from 2015.[190] Following its conclusion, Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter called the 2017 G1 Climax "the best in history".[191]

2018

The 2018 version of the G1 Climax took place from July 14 until August 12.[210] Due to renovations at Ryōgoku Kokugikan, the final three shows for the tournament took place at Nippon Budokan, representing New Japan's first shows at that arena since 2003. The announcement of the participants, blocks and schedule took place during the 2018 Kizuna Road shows.[211] Hiroshi Tanahashi set a then record for most points set by a wrestler in a 20-man G1 Climax with 15 points. The final match was the longest match in G1 history until it was beaten in 2020.

2019

The 2019 edition of the G1 Climax took place from July 6 to August 12 with the finals taking place at Nippon Budokan. For the first time in NJPW history, the opening night of the tournament took place outside Japan, at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas.[19] Kota Ibushi won the G1, defeating Jay White in the final.

2020

The 2020 edition of the G1 Climax took place from September 19 until October 18 with the final three days being held at Ryōgoku Kokugikan. This was the first time that the tournament was not held in the summer but in the autumn. This was due to the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo originally being scheduled to be held when the tournament is usually held. Later, the Olympics were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[20][230] The final match became the longest match in G1 Climax history, surpassing the previous record in 2018. Kota Ibushi became the third wrestler along with Masahiro Chono and Hiroyoshi Tenzan to win two consecutive G1 Climax tournaments and the first wrestler to reach the finals for the third time in a row.

2021

The 2021 edition of the G1 Climax was announced on July 8 and took place from September 18 until October 21 with the finals taking place at Nippon Budokan.[231] Kazuchika Okada and Jeff Cobb set the record for the most points in a 20-man G1 with 16 points each; Cobb also set the record for most consecutive wins in a single G1 Climax with 8 wins in a row. Kota Ibushi also made his fourth consecutive appearance in a G1 final.[232][233] Okada would win the G1, defeating Ibushi in the tournament final by referee stoppage.[234]

2022

The 2022 edition of the G1 Climax was announced on April 9 at Hyper Battle and took place from July 16 until August 18, returning the G1 to the summer. This edition consisted of 28 participants across 4 blocks.[235]The Final match was between Kazuchika Okada and Will Ospreay, which Okada won by pinfall, marking Okada's 4th G1 Climax victory and becoming the 4th wrestler to win two consecutive G1 Climax tournaments, alongside Masahiro Chono, Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Kota Ibushi.[236]

2023

[237] The 2023 edition of the G1 Climax was announced on April 8 at Sakura Genesis and took place from July 15 until August 13.[238] The tournament featured 32 participants, making it the largest G1 to date.[239] The 2023 G1 Climax also featured the tournament debuts of Shota Umino, Hikuleo, Eddie Kingston, Ren Narita, Gabriel Kidd, Alex Coughlin, Shane Haste, Mikey Nicholls, Yota Tsuji and Kaito Kiyomiya with Kingston and Kiyomiya being outsiders from All Elite Wrestling and Pro Wrestling Noah respectively. In the finals, Tetsuya Naito defeated Kazuchika Okada to win his third G1 Climax.

2024

The 2024 edition of the G1 Climax was announced on June 9 at Dominion 6.9 in Osaka-jo Hall and will take place from July 20 until August 18.[240] The tournament will see a return to 20 participants split into two 10-man blocks for the first time since 2021. Only the top 3 wrestlers in each block will advance, with the block winners earning a bye into the semifinals. The tournament will mark the tournament debuts of Callum Newman, Boltin Oleg, Jake Lee, Yuya Uemura, and AEW-DDT representative Konosuke Takeshita.

See also

References

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