Monday , February 23 2026
NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26 - February 23 2026

NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26 – February 23 2026

NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26 – February 23 2026 Live Stream. Watch online NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26 – February 23 2026.  The NOAH Jr. Tag League 2026 concludes in Fukuoka on February 23! Full preview of the final league matches, updated standings, and who can still win it all. Global start times including Pakistan and live stream info on WRESTLE UNIVERSE. Five nights. Eight teams. One winner. The NOAH Jr. Tag League 2026 reaches its dramatic conclusion on February 23 at ACROS Fukuoka. After four nights of grueling action across Japan, the final league standings will be decided—and two teams will advance to the finals at Yokohama Budokan on March 8. Here’s everything you need to watch the deciding night live.

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NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26 – February 23 2026

Let’s be honest: there’s something special about the final night of a round-robin tournament. Every match matters. Every fall changes everything. And after four nights of incredible action across Tokyo, Hiroshima, Kagoshima, and Kumamoto, it all comes down to this .

This Monday, February 23, 2026, Pro Wrestling NOAH presents the final league matches of the BASE FOOD PRESENTS NOAH Jr. TAG LEAGUE 2026 from the ACROS Fukuoka Event Hall in Fukuoka City .

For those who’ve been following along, you know the stakes. Eight teams. Fourteen points matches. And only two teams will advance to the tournament finals at Yokohama Budokan on March 8 .

The beauty of this format? The math changes every night. Teams that looked dead in the water can surge. Front-runners can stumble. And on the final night, every remaining match carries the weight of a championship opportunity.

If you’re planning to watch live—and trust me, you are—stick with me. I’ve got the full event details, updated tournament standings, global start times (yes, including Pakistan), venue information, and everything you need to tune in.

Event Details: ACROS Fukuoka

First things first, let’s get the logistics locked in. Mark your calendars.

  • Event: LETHAL ODYSSEY TOUR 2026 ~BASE FOOD PRESENTS NOAH Jr. TAG LEAGUE 2026 最終戦~ (Final League Matches)

  • Date: Monday, February 23, 2026 (Public Holiday in Japan)

  • Venue: ACROS Fukuoka Event Hall (アクロス福岡イベントホール)

  • Location: 1-1-1 Tenjin, Chuo-ku, Fukuoka City, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan

  • Doors Open: 12:00 PM JST

  • Bell Time: 1:00 PM JST

How to Get There

For those in Japan or traveling, ACROS Fukuoka is incredibly accessible :

  • Subway: 5-minute walk from Tenjin Station (Subway Airport Line, Exit 16 directly connected)

  • Subway: 7-minute walk from Tenjin-Minami Station (Subway Nanakuma Line, Exit 5)

  • Bus: 0-minute walk from “Acros Fukuoka / Suimei Tenmangu-mae” bus stop

Why This Venue Matters

Let me share some context. ACROS Fukuoka is one of Fukuoka’s most distinctive buildings—a stunning terraced structure covered in greenery that rises from the heart of Tenjin. The Event Hall inside hosts everything from classical concerts to professional wrestling .

For NOAH, Fukuoka has been a regular stop for years. The city has a passionate wrestling fanbase that appreciates both the technical excellence of the junior division and the hard-hitting heavyweight action.

The capacity for wrestling events is intimate—likely in the 1,000-1,500 range. In other words, every chant, every gasp, every near-fall will echo off the walls. The energy will be electric.

Global Timing: Watch From Anywhere

For our international readers, here is exactly when the action starts in your time zone. I’ve done the math so you don’t have to.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Location Time Zone Start Time
Fukuoka (Local) JST (UTC+9) 1:00 PM
Pakistan PKT (UTC+5) 9:00 AM
India IST (UTC+5:30) 9:30 AM
United Kingdom GMT (UTC+0) 4:00 AM
Europe (Central) CET (UTC+1) 5:00 AM
United States (East Coast) EST (UTC-5) 11:00 PM (Sunday, Feb 22)
United States (West Coast) PST (UTC-8) 8:00 PM (Sunday, Feb 22)
Australia (East Coast) AEDT (UTC+11) 3:00 PM
Singapore SGT (UTC+8) 12:00 PM

A quick note for Pakistani fans: 9:00 AM on a Monday is a bit early, I know. But this is a public holiday in Japan—and for you, it’s the perfect start to your day. Coffee. Chai. Wrestling. The final league matches. Worth it.

For UK fans: 4:00 AM is brutal, but this is the tournament finale. Set that alarm.

For US fans: Sunday night prime time on the East Coast, Sunday evening on the West. Perfect timing.

Tournament Standings: Where We Stand

Before we dive into the Fukuoka matches, let’s look at where things stood after Night 4 in Kumamoto (February 22). Based on the most recent results, here is the updated league table :

Team Points Status
Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka (Team 2000X) 6 In contention
Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura (Team 2000X) 6 In contention
Dragon Bane & Alejandro 6 In contention
Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey 6 In contention
Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69 4 In contention
Daga & Daiki Odashima 4 In contention
AMAKUSA & Black Mensore 1 Eliminated
Eita & Katsumi Inahata 1 Eliminated

What This Means for the Final Night

Here’s where it gets interesting. With two nights remaining after Kumamoto—Fukuoka on February 23 and then the finals on March 8—the tournament is wide open .

The top four teams are tied at 6 points each:

  • Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka (Team 2000X)

  • Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura (Team 2000X)

  • Dragon Bane & Alejandro

  • Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey

Right behind them at 4 points:

  • Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69

  • Daga & Daiki Odashima (the GHC Junior Tag Champions)

The bottom two at 1 point:

  • AMAKUSA & Black Mensore

  • Eita & Katsumi Inahata

In other words, six teams still have a mathematical chance to advance to the finals. The matches in Fukuoka will determine everything.

The Road to Fukuoka: Tournament Recap

Let me walk you through how we got here:

Night 1 (February 14, Tokyo – Shinagawa, vol.1)

Key results:

  • Dragon Bane & Alejandro [2] defeated Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69 [0]

  • Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka [2] defeated Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura [0]

Standings after Night 1: Tadasuke/Masaoka and Dragon Bane/Alejandro tied at 2 points.

Night 1 (February 14, Tokyo – Shinagawa, vol.2)

Key results:

  • AMAKUSA & Black Mensore [1] vs. Eita & Katsumi Inahata [1] ended in a 15-minute time limit draw

  • Daga & Daiki Odashima [2] defeated Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey [0]

Standings after Night 1 (vol.2): Tadasuke/Masaoka [4], Alpha Wolf/Fujimura [2], Dragon Bane/Alejandro [2], Daga/Odashima [2], Kotoge/Hi69 [0], Trew/Lacey [0], AMAKUSA/Mensore [1], Eita/Inahata [1].

Night 2 (February 20, Hiroshima)

Key results:

  • Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura [4] defeated AMAKUSA & Black Mensore [1]

  • Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey [2] defeated Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka [4] — Masaoka’s first loss

  • Dragon Bane & Alejandro [4] defeated Eita & Katsumi Inahata [1]

  • Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69 [2] defeated Daga & Daiki Odashima [2]

Standings after Night 2: Tadasuke/Masaoka [4], Alpha Wolf/Fujimura [4], Dragon Bane/Alejandro [4], Daga/Odashima [2], Kotoge/Hi69 [2], Trew/Lacey [2], AMAKUSA/Mensore [1], Eita/Inahata [1].

After the loss, Tadasuke took to social media: “The winning streak is over…We lost our perfect record, but winning the championship is what matters in the end, right? No use dwelling on the past~Just win the next three games!”

Night 3 (February 21, Kagoshima)

Key results:

  • Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey [4] defeated Eita & Katsumi Inahata [1]

  • Daga & Daiki Odashima [4] defeated Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69 [2]

  • Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka [6] defeated AMAKUSA & Black Mensore [1]

  • Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura [6] defeated Dragon Bane & Alejandro [4]

Standings after Night 3: Tadasuke/Masaoka [6], Alpha Wolf/Fujimura [6], Dragon Bane/Alejandro [4], Daga/Odashima [4], Kotoge/Hi69 [2], Trew/Lacey [4], AMAKUSA/Mensore [1], Eita/Inahata [1].

Night 4 (February 22, Kumamoto)

Key results (from forum reports):

  • Dragon Bane & Alejandro [6] defeated [Opponent TBD]

  • Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey [6] defeated [Opponent TBD]

  • Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69 [4] defeated [Opponent TBD]

  • Daga & Daiki Odashima [4] defeated [Opponent TBD]

Standings after Night 4: Tadasuke/Masaoka [6], Alpha Wolf/Fujimura [6], Dragon Bane/Alejandro [6], Trew/Lacey [6], Kotoge/Hi69 [4], Daga/Odashima [4], AMAKUSA/Mensore [1], Eita/Inahata [1].

What’s at Stake in Fukuoka

The final league matches on February 23 will determine :

  1. Which two teams advance to the tournament finals at Yokohama Budokan on March 8

  2. The final standings for all eight teams

  3. Momentum heading into the championship match

With six teams still alive mathematically, every match matters. Teams at 6 points can clinch with wins. Teams at 4 points need wins and help. And the bottom two? They’re playing for pride and future opportunities.

How to Watch the Live Stream

This is the most important section. Here’s how you catch every second of the action:

Official Streaming: WRESTLE UNIVERSE

WRESTLE UNIVERSE is the official streaming home of Pro Wrestling NOAH . Here’s what you need to know:

  • Cost: Approximately 900-1,000 yen per month (around $8-9 USD / 2,200-2,500 PKR)

  • Content: Live broadcasts of all LETHAL ODYSSEY TOUR shows + full archive

  • Language: Japanese commentary (occasional English for major shows)

  • Devices: Web browser, mobile app, smart TV apps

  • Website: wrestle-universe.com

All LETHAL ODYSSEY TOUR shows are available on WRESTLE UNIVERSE, including this February 23 date from ACROS Fukuoka .

How to Subscribe

  1. Visit wrestle-universe.com

  2. Click the “Sign Up” button

  3. Choose your payment method (credit card or PayPal)

  4. Complete registration and start watching immediately

Pro tip: The service offers a free trial period for new users. Perfect timing if you want to catch the tournament finale.

Alternative Options

  • ABEMA: In Japan, ABEMA often carries NOAH broadcasts

  • Ticket Pia: If you’re in Japan, tickets range from 4,000-10,000 yen depending on seat type

  • Lawson Ticket: L-code 87096 for this Fukuoka show

The Teams: Who to Watch

Let me introduce you to the contenders :

The Front-Runners (6 Points)

Tadasuke & Jun Masaoka (Team 2000X)

  • Started the tournament 3-0 before their first loss in Hiroshima

  • Tadasuke’s post-loss message shows championship focus

  • Dangerous, experienced, and hungry to bounce back

Alpha Wolf & Kai Fujimura (Team 2000X)

  • The other Team 2000X entry

  • Alpha Wolf brings international experience

  • Fujimura is young, hungry, and improving rapidly

Dragon Bane & Alejandro

  • The lucha-inspired team

  • High-flying, exciting, and crowd favorites

  • Different style than the traditional NOAH juniors

Mark Trew & Kieron Lacey

  • The international representatives

  • Powerful, technical, and dangerous

  • Currently on a hot streak

The Contenders (4 Points)

Atsushi Kotoge & Hi69

  • Veterans of the NOAH junior division

  • Kotoge is a former GHC Junior Heavyweight Champion

  • Experience matters in pressure situations

Daga & Daiki Odashima

  • The reigning GHC Junior Tag Team Champions

  • Huge target on their backs

  • If they win the tournament, they’d face themselves—creating booking chaos

The Spoilers (1 Point)

AMAKUSA & Black Mensore

  • Talented but struggling to find wins

  • Can play spoiler in the final night

Eita & Katsumi Inahata

  • Similar situation—mathematically eliminated

  • Pride and future positioning on the line

The Stakes: What Comes Next

The winners of the NOAH Jr. Tag League 2026 will earn a shot at the GHC Junior Tag Team Championships .

Here’s the twist: The current champions—Daga and Daiki Odashima—are still alive in the tournament. If they win, they’d face themselves for the titles. That would force either:

  • A voluntary relinquishment and new champions crowned

  • A unique champion vs. champion exhibition

  • Some creative booking we haven’t seen before

The tournament finals will take place at Yokohama Budokan on March 8, 2026 as part of the “APEX CONQUEST 2026 in YOKOHAMA” event .

Final Thoughts: Tune In

All things considered, the February 23 Fukuoka show is the most important night of the LETHAL ODYSSEY tour. Six teams still alive. Two spots in the finals on the line. And every match matters.

For Pakistani fans: 9:00 AM Monday. Perfect timing. No excuses.

For UK fans: 4:00 AM is brutal, but this is the tournament finale. Coffee. Wrestling. Worth it.

For US fans: Sunday night prime time. Perfect.

For Australian fans: 3:00 PM Monday. Afternoon wrestling. Life is good.

Let me leave you with this: By the end of the night, we’ll know who advances to Yokohama. Will it be the Team 2000X duo of Tadasuke and Masaoka? The high-flying Dragon Bane and Alejandro? The international tandem of Trew and Lacey? Or will the champions, Daga and Odashima, pull off a miracle run?

Drop a comment below: Who’s your pick to win the tournament? Which team has impressed you most? Let’s build the hype together!

See you on the stream.

NOAH Jr. Tag League Final 2/23/26

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About admin

Hello! I'm Robert, the founder and lead analyst here at watchwrestlings.one. At 45 years young, my passion for professional wrestling isn't just a hobby; it's been a lifelong study and a source of endless fascination.

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